BACKPACKING IN THE DIGITAL AGE

Transcription

BACKPACKING IN THE DIGITAL AGE
BACKPACKING IN THE DIGITAL AGE: ETHNOGRAPHIC PERSPECTIVES FROM
LATIN AMERICA
by
RUSSELL LEE EDWARDS, III
B.A. University of Central Florida 2009
A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements
for the degree of Master of Arts
in the Department of Anthropology
in the College of Sciences
at the University of Central Florida
Orlando, Florida
Summer Term
2013
Major Professor: Ty Matejowsky
© 2013 Russell L. Edwards, III
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ABSTRACT
My thesis ethnographically examines the changing nature of backpacking for Westerners
in Latin America amid a proliferation of mobile computing and social networking. While
anthropological and sociocultural research on tourism is extensive, the social scientific literature
on backpacking has, thus far, been largely unconcerned with Western Hemisphere countries and
the effects of digital technology on this mode of travel. Recent findings suggest, however, that
backpacking has currently moved beyond its niche roots as a subculture of independent traveling
into a full-fledged tourist industry. My thesis investigates the Latin American backpacking scene
to better understand if this is a global trend. The available literature further suggests that today’s
backpackers are represented by various subgroups including older and less budget-constrained
travelers known as “flashpackers.” Despite using the backpacker infrastructure, flashpackers’
disposable income and relatively expensive equipment places them somewhat beyond traditional
backpacker categories. Drawing on ethnographic data collected over two separate multi-sited
field sessions in Nicaragua, Honduras, and Colombia, I document the recent experiences of
backpackers and flashpackers and evaluate how digital technologies inform and affect their
travels.
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
LIST OF FIGURES ....................................................................................................................... vi
CHAPTER ONE: INTRODUCTION ............................................................................................. 1
Thesis Overview .......................................................................................................................... 1
Why Backpacking? .................................................................................................................. 1
Research Considerations ............................................................................................................. 3
Literature Review ........................................................................................................................ 6
Attempts to Define Backpackers ............................................................................................. 7
Demographics ........................................................................................................................ 10
The Role of Technology ........................................................................................................ 12
CHAPTER TWO: METHODOLOGY ......................................................................................... 13
Materials and Methods .............................................................................................................. 13
Analysis Strategy....................................................................................................................... 14
Limitations and Implications..................................................................................................... 15
Research Program Timeline ...................................................................................................... 16
Overview of Chapters................................................................................................................ 17
CHAPTER THREE: CASE STUDIES FROM “THE GRINGO TRAIL” ................................... 18
Craig and Sara ........................................................................................................................... 19
Frank.......................................................................................................................................... 37
Juan............................................................................................................................................ 45
Jack and Oliver .......................................................................................................................... 55
Alex ........................................................................................................................................... 67
Chapter Summary...................................................................................................................... 81
CHAPTER FOUR: DISCUSSION ............................................................................................... 82
Classifications of Traveler Typologies ..................................................................................... 82
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Backpacking as a Subculture ................................................................................................. 83
A Reimagining of Typologies Using an Anthropological Framework ................................. 85
Backpacker Enclaves along the “Gringo Trail” ........................................................................ 89
Consuming Local Culture ......................................................................................................... 98
Technology’s Influence on Backpacking ................................................................................ 103
CHAPTER FIVE: CONCLUSION............................................................................................. 108
Contributions to Anthropology ............................................................................................... 109
Broader Contributions ............................................................................................................. 110
Future Research ....................................................................................................................... 111
APPENDIX A: IRB APPROVAL LETTER .............................................................................. 113
APPENDIX B: SURVEY AND QUESTIONAIRRE ................................................................ 115
APPENDIX C: INTERVIEW GUIDE FOR TRAVELERS ...................................................... 118
APPENDIX D: INTERVIEW GUIDE FOR HOSTEL OWNERS ............................................ 122
APPENDIX E: PERMISSION TO REPRODUCE MATERIALS ............................................ 125
REFERENCES ........................................................................................................................... 127
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LIST OF FIGURES
Figure 1: Map of Salento produced and provided by a local hostel ............................................. 92
Figure 2: Back of map (Figure 1) with information concerning restaurants listed ....................... 93
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CHAPTER ONE: INTRODUCTION
Thesis Overview
My thesis is based on ethnographic research data I collected in multiple urban and rural
sites in Latin America over two separate field seasons in 2011 and 2012. One week was spent in
Nicaragua and Honduras respectively during summer 2011 and roughly nine weeks were spent in
Colombia during fall 2012. Over subsequent pages, I detail the kinds of portable digital
technologies backpackers increasingly utilize while abroad, and consider how this newfound
reliance is helping or hindering backpackers’ travel goals. After reviewing relevant concepts and
findings from sociocultural research on backpacking, I discuss general theoretical issues and
present a hypothesis about intersections of technology and this mode of travel. By means of case
studies drawn from interviewed and surveyed backpackers, I offer new findings about today’s
backpacking community. The earlier framed hypothesis and related issues are revisited at the end
of my thesis. Although mainly focused on travelers in Latin America, my thesis has important
implications for those traveling in other parts of the world as well.
Why Backpacking?
As international travel becomes increasingly affordable to middle-class Westerners, many
travelers are now able to experience the world’s diverse cultures, languages, and historical
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attractions firsthand. While some prefer vacations at luxurious all-inclusive resorts, others are
compelled to travel in a more frugal manner. These backpackers or budget travelers often forgo
the amenities associated with lavish international vacations by seeking out very different travel
experiences. Since the 1960s thousands of American and European youth have followed the
“Hippie Trail,” retracing parts of the Silk Road to destinations like Nepal and India. These
transcontinental and quasi-spiritual journeys often relied on “thumbing” or hitchhiking as a
primary mode of transportation.
The motivations for traveling in this manner may vary since the 1960s, but one arguable
explanation for choosing backpacking over packaged vacations is that it is much easier for these
travelers to immerse themselves in local culture (Richards and Wilson 2004b). While
backpackers may appreciate this assertion, there are scholars who argue otherwise. Several
authors contend that backpackers mainly travel and interact within specific enclaves (O’Regan
2008; Wilson and Richard 2008). These enclaves are spaces frequented by travelers, and differ
from the larger places that encompass them. They mainly facilitate interaction with other
backpackers, but not necessarily with everyday locals.
If backpackers are only interacting with local inhabitants in such a limited or insulated
way, how successful are they at immersing themselves in local culture? More specifically, what
are they really seeking in their travels? Several tentative explanations can be offered based on
previous anthropological findings.
Perhaps much of the backpacking experience is conceptualized as a rite-of-passage
whereby travelers imagine they are gaining valuable experience in dealing with novel or
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disorienting situations. This ability to triumph over such adversity can be used later on in life to
surmount similar obstacles (Richards and Wilson 2004a). If this is true, then what specific
hurdles must backpackers overcome to complete the rite-of-passage? Others suggest that
traveling may be a way to attain a cultural capital that enhances their status both within and
outside their communities of origin (Isenhour 2012). Similarly, backpacking may serve as a way
to construct authentic travel or cultural experiences in the backpacker’s mind (Shaffer 2004).
When considering these proposed explanations, new opportunities for ethnographic
consideration arise for anthropologists and others interested in interactions between Western
travelers and locals.
Research Considerations
Besides examining identity construction, rites-of-passage, and cultural capital, my thesis
also considers how backpackers utilize recent technological advancements in travel planning and
implementation including online forums, blogs, and booking sites. Over the past two decades,
backpackers have had a wider range of options at their disposal to organize their travels beyond
print travel guides such as Lonely Planet.
Still, much of the extant backpacking literature focuses on these guides as the crux of
their ethnography. Sørensen (2003) uses printed travel guides as a primary identifying
characteristic of backpackers. One particular guide, the Lonely Planet, is even referred to as the
religious text of the backpacking community (Welk 2008). While the importance of the Lonely
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Planet to backpackers would be hard to deny, reliance on other sources of information may prove
that the experience being sought is more important than remaining loyal to a specific popular
brand of travel guide.
Rather than basing the designation of backpacking culture on the use of printed guides, I
suggest that viewing backpacking in the theoretical framework of a “subculture” may be more
useful for exploring changing backpacker practices. Marketers Helene de Burgh-Woodman and
Jan Brace-Govan (2007) conduct a literature review of the concept of “subculture” from the
perspective of multiple disciplines and posit that subcultures are actually created through shared
experiences that create similar emotions for an otherwise diverse group of people. This is in stark
contrast to other models of subculture, especially within marketing, that suggest brand loyalty
can create a subculture.
When backpacking is considered through this lens of a subculture, the parameters of
existing literature are broadened. The ability to gain valuable travel information through social
interactions can also been viewed as an important resource among backpackers. Christina
Anderskov (2002) notes that providing relevant travel information such as how to exchange
money or procure travel within a destination serves as a way to build rapport with other
backpackers. She also highlights how some individuals intentionally ignore the
recommendations of other backpackers, due to an assumed difference in travel goals. Therefore,
it stands to reason that selectively choosing certain individuals’ recommendations over others
can be interpreted as attempting to emulate self-identification practices more experienced
travelers have already sought-out and endorse.
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While it is possible to engage with fellow backpackers in person, the Internet is making it
possible to channel recommendations from those who have gone before or keep in contact with
travelers whose recommendations had previously proved useful. It is, therefore, also assumed
that travelers are bringing digital devices capable of accessing this information, especially as
these devices become cheaper and more portable. The perceived trustworthiness of
recommendations from reviews, travel guides, blogs, and online forums is worth investigating as
it can offer insights into how engaged backpackers are with live sources of information.
In my thesis, I argue that the identity and practices of today’s backpackers are now
inextricably linked to mobile digital technologies. If it can be determined that travelers now
utilize information from the Internet more than the information gained from fellow travelers or
from printed travel guides, then the Internet and web-ready mobile devices need to be considered
as a part of the backpacker toolkit. While the literature has discussed the possibility of a
subgroup of backpackers defined by their use of mobile digital technologies as “flashpackers,”
there has not been a thorough investigation of mobile technology use since the ubiquity of hand
held devices has proliferated itself into mainstream culture.
In order to address this gap in the academic literature, I assess the ways mobile
technologies are being utilized. I also examine the potential differentiation of backpacker
typologies based on their technology use. I hypothesize that the Internet now represents the
standard mode for procuring travel information in an effort to accomplish travel goals. I also
hypothesize flashpackers are more predisposed to carrying mobile technologies than “traditional
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backpackers,” and therefore allow technology to play a greater role in their travels. These
hypotheses guide my research and analysis throughout this thesis.
Literature Review
As a topic of anthropological inquiry, tourism initially received little scholarly attention.
Nelson H.H. Graburn (1983) discusses the recent literature in his article, The Anthropology of
Tourism. He links the issues of tourism to the more traditional focuses of anthropology, such as
pilgrimages, rites of passage, and ritual inversions. He summarizes the debate comparing and
contrasting the ideas of pilgrimage and tourism, stating “that there is no hard and fast dividing
line between pilgrimage and tourism, that even when the role of pilgrim and tourist are
combined, they are necessarily different but form a continuum of inseparable elements”
(Graburn 1983:16). Despite such assertions, Graburn does suggest that tourism can reflect either
a “rite of intensification” or a “rite of passage.” The former is comparable to “the annual trip or
vacation,” while the latter is seen to “mark the passage of personal life from one statue to
another” (Graburn 1983:12). He also explains that tourist practices relate to the interplay
between “(1) discretionary income; (2) cultural self-confidence; and (3) symbolic inversions or
reversals” (Graburn 1983:19). He concludes with suggestions for future research efforts.
Scholars from many different disciplines have conducted research on tourism,
particularly its various types. Sociologist Eric Cohen (1972) offers a binary of tourism:
institutionalized tourism and noninstitutionalized tourism (original emphasis). Cohen introduces
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the term “drifter” to denote a specific style of travel. The “drifter” is considered
noninstitutionalized, displaying a propensity for more individualized travel experiences. The
drifter concept anticipates a more multidisciplinary research focus on one group of travelers:
backpackers.
Attempts to Define Backpackers
Despite presently receiving more scholarly attention, concrete definitions of backpackers
have proved somewhat elusive. However, their travel preferences and demographics have been
detailed in the literature, especially when the concept of the drifter serves as the starting point.
The travelers who originally set out to escape Western influences did so by venturing off
to faraway places and traveling without any set plans and a very nominal budget. Individuals
traveling in manners similar to this are labeled “drifters” by Sociologist Erik Cohen.
This type of tourist ventures furthest away from the beaten track and from the
accustomed ways of life of his home country. He shuns any kind of connection
with the tourist establishment, and considers the ordinary tourist experience
phony. He tends to make it wholly on his own, living with the people and often
taking odd-jobs to keep himself going. He tries to live the way the people he visits
live, and to share their shelter, foods, and habits, keeping only the most basic and
essential of his old customs. The drifter has no fixed itinerary or timetable and no
well-defined goals of travel. He is almost wholly immersed in his host culture.
Novelty is here at its highest, familiarity disappears almost completely. [Cohen
1972:168]
Cohen’s drifters (1973) are largely cited as the precursors to modern backpackers (Cohen
2003; Cohen 2010; Hampton 2010; Paris and Teye 2010; Richards and Wilson 2004a). However,
sociologists Natan Uriely, Yuval Yonay, and Dalit Simchai (2002:520-521) note that various
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other terms proposed by academics exist. These include nomads (Cohen 1973), youthful
travelers (Teas 1974), wanderers (Vogt 1976), hitchhikers (Mukerji 1978), tramping youth
(Adler 1985), and long-term budget travelers (Riley 1988). Yet, the common unifying
characteristic among all of these terms is that they fit into the “noninstitutionalized” category of
Cohen’s (1972:169) tourist roles binary (Uriely et al. 2002:521).
Significantly, drifter as an academic label may be more imaginary than real. Cohen
(2003) refers to a disconnect between the romanticized ideals of drifters and their actual
practices. He notes that gaps have always existed between the desire to travel off the beaten path
with no set itinerary and the ability to put such objectives into practices. Such distinctions are
exacerbated by growing numbers of travelers frequenting the same path, which invariably helps
create demand for a tourist industry capable of meeting their needs.
The label of “independent traveler” may be a better description of today’s backpacker.
The terms, independent traveler and backpacker, are used without distinction in selected works
(Elsrud 2001; O’Reilly 2006; Nash et al 2006), as highlighted by Butler and Hannam (2012).
Butler and Hannam note how marketers Kenneth Hyde and Rob Lawson (2003) state that
backpackers represent but one type of independent traveler, and that there are indeed other
travelers who do not fit the description of backpackers but would readily be identified as
independent travelers. Butler and Hannam ultimately argue that what sets backpackers apart
from other independent travelers is a stricter budget, especially as it relates to lodging and
transportation (ibid).
The recent emergence of a new type of traveler challenges notions that backpackers are
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largely spendthrift (Hannam and Diekmann 2010). This new category of backpacker known as a
“flashpacker” can be defined as an:
Older twenty to thirty-something backpacker, who travels with an expensive
backpack or a trolley-type case, stays in a variety of accommodation depending
on location, has a greater disposable income, visits more ‘off the beaten track’
locations, carries a laptop, or at least a ‘flashdrive’ and a mobile phone, but who
engages with the mainstream backpacker culture. [Hannam and Diekmann
2010:2]
The discussion concerning how to label backpackers, or subgroups within the
backpacking community, can be considered largely unnecessary, as a number of those traveling
in a manner that may be described as “backpacking” by scholars do not readily self-identify as
“backpackers” (Anderskov 2002; Richards and Wilson 2004b; Sørensen 2003). In my research, a
concerted effort to recruit a group of ethnographic informants that can fall under a general
definition is essential. Therefore, I attempt to include individuals that seemingly represent
various subgroups regardless of how they self-identify. While I do not ask direct questions about
how these individuals self-identify, I do not discourage them from discussing these varying
labels during interviews or chats.
While spotting individuals with large cumbersome bags strapped to their back is not a
difficult task, accurately labeling them as a backpacker may be somewhat more presumptuous on
the part of the researcher. Revisiting the definition of the “flashpacker” also reveals that some
“backpackers” may not even travel with the name-sake artifact. This can complicate research
efforts to properly identify these types of travelers.
While there may be some ambiguity associated with naming this group of travelers, their
use of lodging and transportation is fairly standardized. Some researchers note that a separate
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tourism infrastructure exists for those engaging in backpacking (Cohen 1973:96; Locker-Murphy
and Pearce 1995; Sørensen 2003). The homogenization of lodging and other services sought out
by backpackers effectively results in the creation of backpacker enclaves (O’Regan 2008; Wilson
and Richard 2008). These enclaves are essentially smaller spaces frequented by travelers which
differ from their larger surroundings. Enclaves serve as a gathering place for backpackers. My
ethnographic informants are drawn primarily from these backpacking enclaves. Such a selective
process appears more expedient than attempting to create a sample based on rigid definitions
offered within the literature or explicitly inquiring about what label the traveler prefers.
Demographics
As previously discussed, the earliest scholarly reference to contemporary backpackers
originates with Cohen (1972). He claims that the composition of drifters is almost inherently
Western, while also noting a new found diversity within the group:
Until recently, drifters were predominately middle-class students or youths who
just completed their studies. Lately, the number of working class drifters seems to
be on the increase. While the early drifters were mainly males, the number of
females greatly increased in recent years. In general, the contemporary drifters are
of more heterogeneous origin than their predecessors, which makes the
emergence of a common, international “drifter culture” the more remarkable.
[Cohen 1973:93]
The group continues to grow more diverse over time. Anthropologist Anders Sørensen
notes that “the heterogeneity is manifest, whether viewed in terms of nationality, age, purpose,
motivation, organization of trip, or life cycle standing” (Sørensen 2003:848). Despite this
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assertion, he goes on to note that “backpackers are still predominately of Western origin,” with
increasing numbers of Israelis and Japanese also engaging in backpacking (Sørensen 2003:852).
According to Sørensen, most backpackers fall between 18 and 33 years old, with the bulk 22 to
27 years old. He suggests that there are more above 27 than below the age of 22, but that the
trend may be slowing (Sørensen 2003:852). This group is generally regarded as educated with
many of them earning academic degrees (Sørensen 2003:852). The sex ratio is claimed to be one
male to one female in Australia and closer to three to two, males to females respectively, in
many parts of the “developing world” (Sørensen 2003:852).
By utilizing sources from various disciplines, tourism agencies, and other entities, it is
possible to tease out the demographics of international travelers such as backpackers and
flashpackers. Multiple studies that are almost entirely qualitative in nature identify some of the
demographics of those participating in interviews (Anderskov 2002; Sørensen 2003). Even with
detailed comparisons of various geographic-specific studies, problems arising from defining
labels and sampling issues would likely only go so far in articulating backpacker demographics.
In delineating the differences and similarities between backpackers and flashpackers, it is
easy to exclude individuals based on not meeting all of the established criteria. My thesis
explores the efficacy of these academic labels by considering backpackers in the broadest sense
of the term and then narrowing my focus to the independent characteristics of flashpackers.
Particular attention is paid to the types of technologies used by flashpackers and those fitting the
more traditional definition of backpackers.
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The Role of Technology
Chronicling how backpackers use technology is of particular interest as it provides
insight into changing practices within this travel community. Understanding what experiences
backpackers seek, and how they use technology to hinder or assist them is essential.
Peter Burns and Michael O’Regan (2008) hypothesize how digital audio devices such as
Apple iPods affect the potential interactions of budget independent travelers. The two suggest
that these devices as well as mobile phones results in travelers disconnecting from the outside
world.
Cody Paris (2010) recently examined backpacking’s new found digital character. He
notes that social networking sites, such as Facebook, “have simultaneously blurred the
boundaries between home and away” (Paris 2010:41). A detailed survey inquiring about Internet
practices before, during, and after travels is circulated online. He argues that backpackers use
these digital technologies to both stay in contact with those back home as well as foster new
relationships with recently met fellow travelers (Paris 2010:63).
Burns and O’Regan (2008) hypothesize about the implications of traveling with powerful
mobile computing. Paris (2010) does not employ a qualitative method to his study and admits
that an effort to corroborate online data should be made at the ground level. A qualitative
exploration of these concepts based on ethnographic fieldwork would significantly contribute to
the current literature.
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CHAPTER TWO: METHODOLOGY
Previous studies concerning backpacking have been grounded in a variety of quantitative
and qualitative methods. While the former expedite the collection of demographic information
and other numerical data, they do not allow research participants to answer more open-ended
questions. Similarly, the latter sometimes limits researchers’ abilities to collect standardized
demographic information, which can help elucidate the respondents’ motivations.
In my research, efforts are made to overcome these limitations by employing a variety of
qualitative and quantitative ethnographic methods. A survey and questionnaire (Appendix B)
provides opportunities to collect information specific to particular individuals and their openended responses. Additionally, ethnographic fieldwork allows for participant observations and
conducting semi-structured interviews (Appendices C and D). Each interview includes questions
related to demographics and other individual information. Pseudonyms are assigned to all
individuals in an effort to protect their identities.
Materials and Methods
My thesis utilizes multiple methods of inquiry to collect data, including a heavy reliance
on participant observation and semi-structured interviews. By traveling as a backpacker, I was
able to engage in participant observation and access interview participants. Backpackers and
hostel owners were sought out for semi-structured interviews. Information derived from informal
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conversations with these individuals as well as tour operators and others that commonly interact
with backpackers proved significant for my thesis research.
Besides these core anthropological methodologies, I also employ a survey and
questionnaire to collect data. Backpackers who agreed to participate in my thesis research are
directed to a website hosting the online survey. I requested that my personal network of contacts
complete the online survey through a Facebook solicitation. Hardcopies were also made
available to participants that had the time to complete them during fieldwork. The survey and
questionnaire encourages participants to categorize amenities offered by lodgings, rank the
importance of digital devices for travel purposes, offer demographic information, and provide
open-ended comments concerned with larger themes associated with travel.
Analysis Strategy
The hypotheses about procuring information from the Internet and carrying mobile
computing devices for this end are tested by analyzing data from surveys, questionnaires,
participant observation, and interviews. More emphasis is placed on participant observation and
interviews for several reasons.
Survey and questionnaire data collected online prove sometimes biased, as proper
screening techniques cannot be employed. Twenty of these are completed online, but the data
they offer are not included due to the aforementioned concerns. I do provide information from
four completed surveys and questionnaires that I personally administer during initial fieldwork in
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Honduras and Nicaragua during summer 2011. Due to this small sample size, a formal
presentation of the data compiled from surveys is not included. The small sample size is a result
of a greater focus being placed on conducting interviews, as the time requirement is not much
greater and allows for more revealing insights.
Sixteen audio-recorded interviews averaging 30 minutes in length are coded to facilitate
my data analysis. Interviewees consist of two hostel owners and 14 independent travelers.
Emerging themes are grouped and explored based on how many times individuals have traveled
as backpackers and their current trip’s duration. This is important for understanding how modes
of travel change based on experience and time-constraints. Analysis of data also allows for the
acceptance or rejection of the hypotheses.
Limitations and Implications
This study has certain limitations in terms of depth and scope. I am unable to follow
multiple individuals around to see if they travel in the manner they report in surveys and
interviews. Additionally, participant observation is somewhat limited due to the language
barriers that emerge within a multilingual backpacker community. My proficiency in Spanish
varies during the course of my research, beginning with a conversational understanding and
ultimately improving to intermediate fluency at best, and I do not speak nor understand any other
languages utilized by backpackers.
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Despite fieldwork occurring in multiple Latin American sites, this study is not an
exhaustive investigation of the entire region. The infrastructure of any given place may dictate
certain actions. Thus, I am careful about generalizing my results to the entirety of Latin America.
In particular, Internet access may be limited or non-existent in certain places and locals may not
be accustomed to communicating in their non-native languages. Identifying the unique
circumstances of each location, however, can be advantageous for the study as well. This could
possibly identify if backpackers are partial to specific settings and what they offer for the travel
experience.
Many questions have been posed about the current state of backpacking (Cohen 2003).
This study addresses relevant questions about current backpacking trends, especially those
concerned with practices in parts of the world that have traditionally been ignored by scholars,
such as Latin America. Thus, I make a concerted effort to explore this topic in detail. Also, since
mobile technologies are constantly evolving, research efforts surrounding their general use often
lags behind these advances. This study attempts to explore mobile technologies’ specific impact
on backpacking as there remains a dearth of information on the subject presently.
Research Program Timeline
Research for this project dates back to summer 2011, when I completed a comprehensive
literature review and received IRB approval for my thesis work. Online surveys were made
available before conducting fieldwork in Utila, Tegucigalpa, and La Ceiba, Honduras, and Leon
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and Ometepe, Nicaragua over two weeks in summer 2011. In fall 2012, I conducted roughly nine
weeks of fieldwork in Colombia in the following towns and cities: Medellin, Guatape,
Cartagena, Tagana, Minca, Santa Rosa de Cabal, Salento, Cali, and Santa Marta.
Overview of Chapters
The following chapters consider the experiences of independent travelers in Latin
America and how mobile technology affects their journeys. Chapter Three chronicles my
interactions with seven independent travelers. Chapter Four discusses the efficacy of traveler
typologies and offers new perspectives on these, as well as the current backpacker scene in Latin
America, with a particular focus on the creation and use of backpacker enclaves, along with
technology’s role and influence on the backpacking experience. The aforementioned hypotheses
are also tested in this chapter. Chapter Five synthesizes my research findings and suggests new
directions for possible research on this topic in the future.
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CHAPTER THREE: CASE STUDIES FROM “THE GRINGO TRAIL”
Cultural anthropologists have long recognized that living within a particular community
for an extended period of time provides favorable opportunities for understanding how and why
individuals go about accomplishing various tasks. This kind of arrangement not only allows
researchers to witness firsthand the technologies that community members regularly utilize, it
also offers opportunities for documenting the possible side-effects related to their use. For these
reasons, I set out on the aforementioned field sessions in 2011 and 2012 to gain a better
perspective on the current state of backpacking in Latin America with particular emphasis on the
role digital technology plays in shaping individuals’ travel experiences.
This chapter documents travelers’ social exchanges with each other as they interact at
hostels, bus stops, restaurants, bars, guided tours, and other locations. The effects that mobile
computing devices, social networking, and other digital technological services, such as email,
have on these interactions are also presented over subsequent pages. Seven independent
travelers, six of Western origin and one from Mexico, are profiled over the following five case
studies. Again, efforts have been made to protect the identities of those profiled, including
assigning them pseudonyms.
The following case studies are constructed in a similar manner. After explaining how I
came to meet these individuals, I discuss my interactions with them right up until our interviews.
Next, I present relevant excerpts from semi-structured interviews or surveys and questionnaires,
which cover a wide range of topics concerned with traveling. When appropriate, I offer my own
observations about their statements. The case studies then proceed with a continued timeline of
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my post-interview interactions with the individuals. Finally, I conclude with a short description
of how, or if, we stay in contact after going separate ways.
Before delving into the particular case studies, I should note that discussions about each
are reserved for the following chapter.
Craig and Sara
I leave Orlando, Florida and arrive in San Pedro Sula, Honduras after several layovers
only to immediately grab a bus to the capital city of Tegucigalpa. I experienced San Pedro Sula
before and have little desire to spend additional time there.
I plan on staying in the only hostel I find listed in Tegucigalpa, but am talked out of it by
the taxi driver whom I hail ten minutes after arriving at the bus station. Luckily, I know enough
Spanish to have a back and forth conversation with the driver. I have an address that he does not
know and he asks why I am trying to go there. I explain that there is a cheap place to stay. Upon
discovering that I will be catching a bus first thing in the morning, which is wise of me according
to him, he tells me I can stay near the bus station for about the same price and skip out on paying
for another taxi in the morning. He claims the neighborhood is safer than most in the city, so I
agree.
Tegucigalpa is not considered much safer than San Pedro Sula, although I am brave, or
possibly foolish, enough to venture outside of my hotel unaccompanied to a local bar for a
cerveza (beer) in celebration of my birthday. This happens after the inn keeper and I exchange
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some dialogue in my broken Spanish and I surmise he thinks the bar is “bad,” but “not
dangerous.” I feel safe in the bar despite being the only patron who is not a local. A television
plays Spanish music videos that appear to primarily be from the 1980s. I witness dancing and
singing, and am the recipient of the occasional smile, long glance, and a blown kiss.
The next morning I eat breakfast at a restaurant and go to the bus station. I purchase my
ticket and am waiting for the bus when I notice a man wearing a hat featuring a logo of an
organization from the United States. I comment on his hat and we strike up a conversation. A
younger woman sitting nearby appears to be listening in on our conversation and smiles at us, so
we ask if she speaks English. It turns out her name is Sara and she is another unaccompanied
traveler making her way through Central America.
Craig, Sara, and I start off with the usual “where are you from, where have you been, and
where are you going” talk. Sara is from Germany and Craig is from the United States. Both have
jobs that provide extended breaks, and as a result they are both traveling solo for about six weeks
before returning home, although Sara is meeting up with a friend from home during the last week
of her journey. Both are in their early thirties. Sara has a master’s degree and Craig is nearly
finished with one as well. This provides a nice opportunity for me to explain my fieldwork and
ask them some questions.
Craig shows me a print-out of a proposed travel itinerary for Central America that he
found on some website I have never heard of before. The list includes places of interest and
suggested durations for stays at each stop, but no details on lodgings, restaurants, or nightlife. He
has more or less followed it and is nearing the end of his journey. He explains that he is planning
20
on getting off the bus in Managua, Nicaragua and asks if I am too. I explain that I have been to
the city and found it rather crowded with little to do. I tell him that I will be getting off before
Managua, in a city called León. I visited León, Nicaragua a couple years prior, but was only able
to spend an afternoon there. I liked what I saw and wanted to explore the city some more. Since
León is on the way to Managua, it does not cost more to get there. I encourage Sara and Craig to
stop in León as well. They sound interested and say they’ll consider it.
We all board the bus and I ask if they would mind filling out a survey and questionnaire I
have with me. Both agree and begin filling them out. Since Craig is the first person to fill out a
hard copy, I ask if he understands everything. I am especially concerned about two questions that
have ranking systems built-in for answers. He says he did not have any issues and begins
discussing his answers in detail. I do not have the ability to audio record my conversation with
Craig, but do take written notes during this discussion. Some quotes are also pulled directly from
his completed survey.
Craig took his first backpacker-style trip two years ago and this trip is his third traveling
in this manner. His motivations for traveling are “culture” and “history,” and he claims “it’s fun
and a challenge.” He states that he makes 70,000 United States Dollars (USD) a year and is
gainfully employed at the moment, but is enjoying a scheduled break by traveling
internationally.
He considers his first hostel experience “great” and “met lots of people who became
friends.” He also notes that “English language speakers are always on staff,” and that the
experience is “more fun and you learn different cultures.” When selecting lodging, he claims that
21
reviews (from friends or online and from the “Lonely Planet Book”) are the most important
factor, followed by included extras, location, helpfulness of staff, price, and security. He also
makes special mention of the importance of a “bar/nightlife,” “Wi-Fi,” “Kitchen/meal,”
“restaurant,” and “A/C.” He admits to splurging on lodging from time to time, especially if he
“need[s] hot water or Internet,” or “sometimes [he’s] tired and want[s] privacy.” He notes
hostelworld.com, lonelyplanet.com, and cheaptickets.com as websites he uses for travel
planning.
Craig is particularly fond of the Lonely Planet guide. He uses “Lonely Planet’s ‘on a
shoestring’ Book for everything.” He has not met many people that do not have the guidebook
and is amazed I am traveling without one. He exclaims, “It’s the Bible, man!” Sara is also
traveling with one and has a newer edition than Craig. We often consult hers as his is particularly
bare about locations just opening up to budget-travelers.
Craig ranks a digital camera and a cell phone as the first two items he would pack (from a
provided list on the survey). Upon revisiting this answer on his survey, he selects “other” as his
first choice and specifies an iPhone. He claims that he would not even bother with a separate
digital camera if the one built into the iPhone were better. He states, “All I need is my phone and
my camera.” He is traveling with an iPhone and a digital camera, but the latter stopped working
and he has resorted to talking photos with his phone.
His use of social networking and email increase when he travels. He explains, “Because I
meet so many new friends and post new pics and keep in touch back home with people (family).”
22
Not long after we finish discussing the survey and other travel items, Craig informs me that he
would like to check out León and that maybe we should see if Sara would like to join us in
splitting a private room at one of the hostels. Sara agrees and I tell them of a hostel I looked into
online before leaving home. About this time she hands me back her completed survey.
Sara lives in Germany and earns about 49,000 USD a year. She is also gainfully
employed, but like Craig is spending an extended vacation abroad.
Sara has traveled in a backpacker-like manner “about 20” times and started doing so in
1998. Her last trip lasted about a month. Sara writes the following about motivations for
traveling, “I’d like to see different countries and get to know different cultures. Somehow it’s
thrilling to travel without having booked anything. It’s just great to see the difference around the
world, life, landscape, animals…”
Getting to know as many places as possible is important to Sara. “I try to get to know as
many parts of the world as I can. I wouldn’t go anywhere twice. But if I liked the area/continent I
would probably go there again next time.” Besides owning a Lonely Planet Guidebook, Sara
claims she uses “different pages for research and reviews,” but that she also collects information
from friends who travel. “I also listen definitely to friends’ recommendations but only after
choosing a place.” Sara’s first experience with hostels and similar lodging for budget travels was
more than sufficient. “I was quite lucky, but also did lots of research before. I didn’t expect that
much, but it was nice, clean and comfortable [plus] helpful staff. I just spend the nights there, so
it’s enough.”
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Sara is very concerned with the location and safety of a hostel (and lists these two factors
as the most important, respectively, out of eight choices). When asked if she ever stays at more
expensive lodging, she states, “Yes, sometimes, if it’s said it’s dangerous I prefer to stay in a
more expensive one, because they also offer transports so that I don’t have to use public
transportation.” The sense of safety in numbers is likely why she seeks out travel partners. “I
prefer traveling with friends, but when no one is available, I also travel alone.”
Sara almost seems indifferent to having access to digital technologies while traveling. I
only see her use a digital camera and she claims she would not bring a laptop, netbook, tablet, or
E-Reader while traveling even if she owned them. She does claim an increase in using social
network while traveling, “because you always get to know lots of people, especially when you
travel alone.” She does not carry a digital device that allows her to access the Internet, and
instead visits an Internet café or uses a hostel computer if she needs to get online. I happen to be
carrying a netbook with me on this trip, but unlike Craig, she never asks to use it despite its
availability. The hostel I mention in León is not listed in Craig’s guidebook, but Sara has a blurb
about it in hers. The Lonely Planet notes that they offer a pool, Wi-Fi, and a free brief
international call once a day. It is one of the most expensive hostels listed, but is only about two
USD more than the average cost, bringing the total to eight USD a night per person.
The first night we end up booking three individual dorm bunks as there is not an opening
in any of the private rooms. Despite the fact that there are about 16 beds total, we do not share
the room with anyone else. We settle into the room, shower, and head out for dinner. Some local
women notice us looking for something and ask if they can help. Craig speaks very little
24
Spanish, so Sara and I take the lead in asking about a good restaurant. The women make a
recommendation and bid us farewell. As we are eating dinner, the restaurant begins offering
karaoke. We all peruse the songbooks and make the collective excuse that there are not any good
songs before leaving. I think we all silently breathe a sigh of relief that no one pushes the issue of
singing.
We walk around town and drop into a hostel that has a large bar and stage. Tonight is
Friday night and there is a local band covering classic rock songs. We notice the place is rather
packed with foreigners, and that they all seem to be enjoying the show. I strike up a couple
casual conversations and meander around the public spaces. The hostel has notices posted that
only registered guests can enter rooms.
The three of us meet back up and follow up on a recommendation by heading to a small
bar nearby. This particular place is much smaller and has nearly as many locals as foreigners. I
notice some of the local hostel workers from our place are there and begin chatting with them.
We end up calling it a relatively early evening due to a desire to go exploring the next day, and
head back to the hostel for some sleep.
The following day sees us pursuing “volcano boarding.” We know that one of the larger
hostels offers organized trips for the masses, but we decide to look into a local group that is
advertised at our hostel. The hostel operates an information kiosk for activities and they call the
tour operators on our behalf. They inform us that it may be better to wait a day, because English
speaking guides will be available then. We decide that Spanish speaking guides are not a
25
problem, and decide to go now rather than risk missing out due to bad weather or other
unforeseen circumstances.
The agency that operates the tours is just down the road, so we walk to the building. The
trip includes volcano boarding, a trip to a “hidden” lagoon, and a walking tour of León Viejo
(Old Leon). We are told it will consume the vast majority of our day, and we all agree that it is a
worthwhile expedition. We pay for our trips in cash to avoid a five percent surcharge for credit
cards.
The local woman working the desk offers us our choice of a stand up board resembling a
crude snowboard, or something that resembles a sled and requires sitting down. We all opt for
the boards and wait for our guides. Three local guides arrive on motorcycles and tell us to hop on
the back of their bikes. I end up with a guide named Marcus who looks overdressed, and the
other guides joke that he is going to “la discoteca (the dance club),” instead of work. His
motorcycle is a cruiser and does not resemble the others, which are clearly designed to be driven
on the road or on dirt paths. It turns out this is his first day on the job. I think little of it as we
head out toward the volcano.
The ride there starts off great. The bike easily navigates the paved streets of town. The
guides are all wearing helmets but none of us are offered one, so I feel the wind blowing on my
face and through my hair. The paved portion of our trip ends and we are on a hard-packed dirt
road leaving town. We pass ox-drawn carts transporting locals and free-ranging livestock.
Everyone seems friendly and smiles or waves as we pass.
26
We make a turn and suddenly the path is something more akin to sand. Marcus struggles
to steady the bike, but we push onward. All of a sudden the path proves less forgiving and we
begin to wobble heavily. Marcus nearly drops the bike as I ditch it entirely. We are both unhurt,
so he resumes the difficult task of navigating the loosely-packed sand. Marcus tells me to take
his helmet, but I refuse. He will not proceed until I do, so I reluctantly acquiesce. Things seem to
be going swimmingly when I suddenly feel myself being thrust forcefully forward. I look down
and realize that the motorcycle hit a rather large stump unnoticed by Marcus, and that we went
from about 20 miles per hour to a dead stop in less than a second. Marcus and I verify that we are
both alright and start up again.
The path proves even more difficult and he nearly loses control yet again. I remark that
the bike is not made for these conditions and he agrees. He asks if I know how to drive a
motorcycle, and I explain that I once owned an off-road model. He lets me try my hand at
driving. It does not take long for me to realize I am in over my head, so I relinquish the driving
duties. The lead guide, Alejandro, tells us to wait there while he drops off Craig. He explains that
he will return for me.
Marcus and I sit on the side of the path and make small talk for a moment. He suggests
we give it one last try before admitting defeat, and I tell him I’m on board. We encounter
surprisingly few difficulties once we pick up some speed. We are in the process of turning a
blind corner at the same time that Alejandro is racing back for me. Luckily, both drivers veer to
their respective rights as the bikes tumble towards the ground. Marcus and I are thrown into the
brush, but I am fortunate enough to get out of the way of the bike before it lands on me. Marcus
27
and Alejandro also escape serious injury. Marcus’s motorcycle does appear damaged, but is still
capable of running. The three of us push onward after a quick inventory of motorcycle parts and
our extremities.
We finally reach a store at the foot of the volcano. Sara and Craig ask if everyone is
alright, and we inform them that everything is fine. We buy waters and Gatorades for ourselves
and our guides. After parking the motorcycles, Alejandro begins leading us up the volcano.
He explains that the volcano is still active and is overdue for an eruption. Pockets of gas rise up
and provide cool photo opportunities, provided you can withstand the sulfur smell. Alejandro
offers to take as many photos as we like. He jokes with us until we reach the summit.
We unpack our bags and see that our coveralls look as if they were stolen from some
dilapidated scarecrows. Mine proves to be about three sizes too small. Sara has an issue with hers
and is going to skip it altogether when she realizes she can use mine. I do not have coveralls that
fit, but do put on the gloves, knee and elbow pads provided. Sara and Craig make it down with
relative ease, but I am reluctant to pick up any real speed due to a lack of protection. The sides of
the volcano are lined with small pebbles, and it is clear to me that they are capable of taking off
chunks of skin. I slowly make my way down without incident, but with shoes and pockets full of
pebbles due to intentionally falling if I deemed my speed was increasing too fast.
Shortly after our arrival to the summit, a large truck pulls up with a tarped canopy over
the bed. It is from the large hostel that offers excursions to the volcano. The truck’s occupants
file out of the bed and carry their sled-like boards to the top. They all don matching orange
jumpsuits and protective goggles and begin sledding one-by-one down to the bottom. Their
28
entire operation is fast and efficient, and their counterparts cheer them on as they reach
impressive speeds. We gather our belongings and continue the rest of our three-part journey.
We take a different path towards our next destination, and I am grateful. The lagoon is
relaxing and we enjoy our time there. Next, we make our way to León Viejo and complete a brief
walking tour led by Alejandro. He then takes us to a restaurant where we eat lunch and lounge
for a moment. The guides claim they are not hungry, and do not join us during our meal. Upon
finishing eating, we get back on the motorcycles and head back towards their office in town.
Sara and I arrive at the same time, but Craig and his driver are nowhere to be found. We
wait and begin to worry as night falls. Our guides are also concerned but have no way of
reaching their coworker. After at least 30 minutes we see a motorcycle approach. Craig tells us
that they ran out of gas and it became quite the ordeal to retrieve some more. He points out that
the motorcycle has no headlight, so they had nothing to guide them after sunset. We are all
relieved that everyone returns without serious injury, and thank our guides for all they have
done. We also express our gratitude in the forms of cash gratuities and our guides thank us. The
woman working the office asks for Craig to take down their email in order to get photos for
advertising purposes. He obliges and tells her he will send them.
Not long after our day-trip, we meet some people who booked through the other hostel.
They say they really enjoyed their experience, despite it not including the lagoon or walking
tour. Their trip was considerably cheaper than ours, and they note that their hostel did provide a
beer upon arriving at the bottom and two free alcoholic drinks just for booking the activity. We
decide amongst ourselves that our trip was much more of an adventure, and that we have better
29
stories as a result. No one complains about spending more, and Craig notes that our money went
directly into the local economy.
Later that night we go out to explore the nightlife of León. We settle on one particular
club because it does not have a cover charge, and begin mingling with other travelers. Craig and
another traveler that has joined our group, Tom, become uncomfortable and claim that some of
the local men seem to be hitting on them. They want to leave, but Tom is worried about paying a
cover charge to get in elsewhere. Craig says he does not care about the charge, and that is not
much money. Craig says we should go see the other club, so Sara and I join him in bidding
farewell to Tom.
We hang around the nightclub for several hours. There is a mix of foreigners and locals,
with locals being the dominant group, numerically speaking. At one point, a local man sitting by
himself tries to offer me a drink from a plastic bag by casually motioning to it while holding it
under a ledge. It is common for street vendors to pour the contents of a drink into a plastic bag
and keep the bottle, so the plastic container is not an uncommon site. It is, however, strange to
see something other than a can, bottle, or cup in a bar or restaurant.
I am well aware of the dangers of accepting drinks or leaving one unattended, so I do not
even slightly entertain the idea of drinking from the bag. I point the man out to Craig who
immediately claims the bag contains “drugs,” most likely the variety that leaves an unknowing
user unconscious. We are unsure of whom to report him to, as there is no visible police or
security presence, so we decide just to keep a close eye on him in an effort to make sure no one
30
becomes his victim. He seems to realize that his plan has been discovered, and leaves shortly
thereafter.
Sara explains she is tired and wants to return to our hostel. Craig says he does not want to
call it a night just yet, but does not want Sara to walk alone. He tells me to stick around and that
he will return after dropping her off at our room. I strike up some conversations with some other
travelers and they all explain how much they love Nicaragua. Somehow, Tom has found a way
inside without paying the cover charge and joins in on the conversation. Most of the travelers
think the country is on the rise and that it will not remain in its current state for long. A young
English traveler tells me he came because he wanted to be able to tell his future children that he
“went to Nicaragua 20 years ago, before it is what is now [speaking of the supposed future state
of the country].”
There is still no sign of Craig, and it is getting extremely late. Some people suggest that
we leave and visit a stand selling pizza. I explain that I am interested, but that I want to take the
direct path back to the hostel, which does not pass the alleged pizza stand, in case Craig is on his
way back to the club. I bid the majority of the group farewell and Tom and I start back towards
the hostel.
I never do pass Craig, and it turns out that he and Sara are both in the private room we
were able to get earlier that day when the previous occupants checked out. I come in and ask
Craig why he never came back. He does not seem to offer much of an explanation, so I drop the
subject. The three of us start having a friendly conversation about our experiences out on the
town when there is a knock on the door. I open the door to an upset woman in her late 20s or
31
early 30s, who asks that we keep it down. We apologize and state that we will be quieter. As
soon as the door is shut, Craig dismisses her complaint. He states, “They think this is a four star
resort!” The next morning I see the woman and sheepishly apologize for our loudness. She
assures me it is no problem and we strike up a brief conversation.
I end up altering my loose travel plans to spend several more days with Sara and Craig.
Based on their recommendation, we decide to head to an island in Lake Nicaragua named
Ometepe. It is a single island formed by two volcanos and their guidebooks claim it is worth a
visit. We eat lunch, stop at some ATMs, and grab an old yellow school bus headed towards
Rivas, Nicaragua.
Once the bus stops we grab a taxi driver and tell him we need to catch the ferry headed
towards Ometepe. We ask him to traverse the distance as quickly as possible, as we are in danger
of missing the last ferry of the day. We make it to the ferry with just a few minutes to spare, and
remark at our good fortune. While on the ferry we discuss where we will stay once we make it to
the island. I suggest we all look at the guidebook and silently make a selection. If one place
receives at least two votes, we will stay there. They agree, and Craig and Sara both
independently select the same hostel.
Upon disembarking we set out for the hostel. We decide to check out a few that are on
our way to the selected destination. We ultimately decide to stay at the first “hotel” we looked at,
which was not what we selected from the guidebook. It actually turns out to be the hostel I
selected from the guidebook, but we only realize this after discovering that the establishment has
changed names.
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We check in and set out for dinner. We realize that the addresses listed in the guidebook
will be of little assistance, as there appear to be no street signs or addresses on buildings. We
settle on a restaurant where some guests are eating pizza. The local waitress informs us that it is
too late for pizza, so I order shrimp and the others order spaghetti. Sara wants to head back to our
room to get a full night’s rest, but Craig and I have plans to explore the island further.
Craig and I set out to find a local bar listed in the guidebook, but get conflicting
directions from various locals. We are just about to give up when we hear music in the distance.
After walking several minutes in that direction, we realize we have passed all the hostels and
other places frequented by tourists. The music is getting louder as we draw in on its source.
Suddenly, we find ourselves in the middle of a local fair. There are homemade carnival games,
donkey rides, and tents selling local beer.
There is not another foreigner in sight. We are approached by a man who inquires in
Spanish as to whether or not we want to join him and his friends for a beer. I am somewhat
weary, as we were not interacting with the man prior to his offer. Despite my concern, Craig
deems him harmless and we walk with him to his table.
It turns out that one of the young women in the group is actually a waitress at the bar we
were looking for earlier. A male friend of hers is the manager. Neither speaks English, but one of
their friends, Carlo, has a father from the United States and speaks the language fluently. Carlo
dominates the conversation with his witty banter, and acts as translator when needed. They
explain that the bar is closed due to the festival, which is in honor of the patron saint of the
island. However, they claim we can go there after the festival winds down.
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After a while we leave the festival and join a rather large group of locals who have
flooded a previously empty open-air concrete slab. A DJ has set up, lights are flashing, and
everyone is on the dance floor, which is nothing more than concrete. Rain begins falling but no
one seems to mind. We all dance until the music stops and everyone is instructed to leave. Our
newly formed friends ask if we want to go to the bar, and we agree. We each drink another beer
while making small talk.
We tell Carlo that we want to hike to the waterfall we have heard about. He says we will
need to rent off-road motorcycles to get there or hire a vehicle and driver. He tells us that he will
come visit us the next day and serve as our guide, since that used to be his profession. We
eventually settle our tab and return to the room.
The next day, Sara, Craig, and I discuss the possibility of looking into more lodging
options. We walk to a hostel nearby that could not accommodate us the night before. They have
availability and we check out the room. It is very plain, but nice. The facility does not offer WiFi, and is not shy about admitting it. Craig and I take this into account while considering the
swap, but not Sara. She thinks the cleanliness of the place is more valuable than an Internet
connection. I would really like access because I am trying to piece together a way to make it
back to Tegucigalpa the next day without the aid of a charter bus, which does not run in the
direction I need for the times I require. Plus, I want to remain in contact with a friend I am
meeting in San Pedro Sula two days later. Ultimately, Craig and I argue that it does not make
sense to move all of our belongings and pay a higher rate at the new establishment. Sara seems
disappointed in our decision, but does not argue as she is outnumbered.
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We return to our room to book another night, and then begin discussing whether or not
we are going to carry through with our plans to visit the waterfall. Craig and I are high on the
idea of driving motorcycles, but our previous experience is fresh in our minds and we are
worried about the possibility of getting stuck along the way. Sara claims she is comfortable with
the idea, provided she can ride on the back a bike being driven by Craig or me.
We walk outside of our hotel and see Carlo waiting for us. He tells us we should rent
from a group operating next door. Another operation sees us looking at motorcycles and tells us
that they have newer models that are more reliable. Carlo and the competitors he recommends
claim that we will be charged for phantom damages on the new bikes, and that the rival outfit
can see gullible gringos coming from a mile away. Craig and I have a brief discussion about our
options. Craig acknowledges that Carlo is likely getting some kickback for referring us, but that
factor does not play into his decision making process. We opt to rent from the outfit Carlo
recommends, and we split the cost of renting a motorcycle for him as well.
Our trip goes well and we enjoy the waterfall. We stop for dinner and buy Carlo’s meal
as a token of our appreciation. On the way back, we have to stop on the side of the road in a
downpour to let a parade procession pass. Carlo informs us that the parade is also in honor of the
patron saint of the island. We watch for several minutes as the participants march past, and
remark at our good fortune for catching yet another local event far removed from the part of
town housing all the tourists. No one seems to mind the rain.
We eventually make it back to the rental outfit and return our bikes. Carlo accompanies
us to our room and says that we should all go out for drinks. Carlo waits until he has my
35
attention, and then mentions that the motorcycle burnt him. I offer him the first aid kit we have,
but he declines. He asks if I have some money to spare because he could use it to buy milk for
his baby at home. I give him some cash in my pocket and he thanks me. I think to myself that he
is lucky he did not ask Craig for any money, because Craig had explicitly told me he hates when
someone asks for money. He has no problem picking up the tab for a night out, or purchasing
anything that is consumed by his group, but he absolutely refuses to directly hand someone
money. He told me a story about a falling out with a local friend he had made earlier in his trip
due to an unabashed request for money. I do not tell Craig about Carlo’s request.
We all meet up later that evening at a bar Carlo tells us about. After a few rounds, we
decide to call it a night. I need to catch an early ferry the next morning, and Craig and Sara want
to hike to the top of the taller volcano. They beg Carlo to serve as their guide, but he claims he
will die if forced to make the trip. He eventually agrees and claims he will be at the room at
seven the next morning.
The next morning I am packing my things as Sara and Craig are preparing for their
journey. Craig wants me to stick around and hike with them, but I explain that it is not possible.
We receive a knock on the door and I suggest it is an employee of the hotel. I am shocked to
open the door and see a tired Carlo wearing a floppy hat. I welcome him inside and he explains
that he kissed his wife and baby goodbye for the last time this morning, because he knows there
is no way he will return alive. We all joke for a few minutes and then I bid the entire group
farewell.
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Craig, Sara, and I do interact somewhat via social networking after going our separate
ways. Sara fills me in about the progress of her travels, and asks about mine. I have less direct
interaction with Craig. I also connect with Carlo via social networking and he is happy to have
access to the photos from our trip. My connections with all of them are fleeting, and within a
month of our time together we stop directly communicating.
Frank
I first meet Frank while waiting for a free group Spanish class being offered at a local
university in Medellin. Since all of the other classrooms are for classes for local tuition-paying
students, it is not difficult for Frank to identify me as a gringo who is probably waiting on the
same class. The fact that I look a little unsure about being in the right place, exacerbated by
having gone to the wrong campus on my first attempt to attend this class, probably makes things
even easier for him. Frank asks if I am waiting on the Spanish class and I reply that I am. We
introduce ourselves and wait for the instructor.
Despite sharing an apartment with several locals, I have not been able to practice my
Spanish much due to their busy schedules. Therefore, I seek out this class because I want to
improve my Spanish. While I think it would also be a good place to meet other foreigners
residing in the city, I have not the slightest inclination of meeting a potential research consultant.
This is primarily because I assume backpackers are too mobile to attend a class only offered a
couple of times a week in an area somewhat removed from the city’s tourist district. Perhaps I
37
should have foreseen that meeting a backpacker was a definite possibility as the language class
was free of charge.
Frank is indeed a backpacker in nearly the truest sense of the word. He is 26 years old
from the United States, holds a bachelor’s degree, stays in hostels, and is in the middle of a
yearlong trip on a rather limited budget. He seeks out the class primarily because he is intent on
staying in Medellin for an extended period of time and is also compelled to practice his Spanish.
An opportunity to “volunteer” at a local hostel allows him to stay without paying the nightly rate
for a dorm bunk. As a certified English teacher, he is also giving private lessons to locals. These
are things he can only do if he is stationary for an extended period of time. By not spending
much in Medellin, he is able to extend the length of his overall trip.
Frank and I become friends as language students and it is not long before we start
associating with each other outside of class. I ask if he would mind me hanging around his hostel
to recruit potential research consultants for my thesis research. He says I am welcome to stop by
anytime and that he will be happy to help. His assistance does lead to a handful of interviews.
More importantly, I am able to view the inner workings of the same hostel over an extended
period of time. Frank also provides valuable insights by serving as a primary research consultant.
Frank and I spend nearly two months in the same city, and I visit him quite often while he is
volunteering at his hostel. We also frequently attend various events on weekends and during the
occasional weekday. Some of the answers Frank provides during an October 2012 interview
along with some of my observations regarding the topics being discussed are presented below.
Frank says he began traveling as a backpacker in 2008 while a college senior.
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I ask Frank, “Why do you travel?” He replies:
I travel because I am curious to see other countries and to see their cultures. I
enjoy being in new places, being in new situations and seeing how they unfold. I
think that there is a lot of shaking out to do of personality, uhm, you know, in
your twenties, especially during your twenties. And uh, traveling and putting
yourself in new situations and putting yourself in, you know, and starting life
scenarios, you know, like maybe build a social network or find work, make some
money, you know. I think that after you do that a lot, you know, you learn a lot
about kind of the patterns of how you intend to do things. Do you like to, do you
like to move around a lot more or do you like to, you know, stay in one place. So I
guess, you know, a lot for personal growth, curiosity. [Pauses to allow me to
finish writing notes, but then an additional pause]
Also, uh, I think that if you live your whole life just in one culture, like the United
States, you know you are kind of only seeing the world from one point, I guess.
And that’s like, that’s impossible to do, like even if you just can, uh, move to a
different culture and see the world from that point, then, you know, you kind of
have a reference point and you can kind of compare and contrast things about
your culture versus, you know, the other culture that you’ve been in. You know if
you have three reference points, you know, then you kind of have a 3D kind of
thing going on. And I think it just makes you more aware of how your life is,
when you’re, like for example when I go back to the United States I’m gonna be,
you know, under different kinds of pressures than I am in Colombia, or for, and to
be aware that those pressures are there, makes those pressures more of an outside,
outside variable, rather than, like, something I attribute to myself, you know, like
I’m not good enough in this job, it’s so stressful. You know, I’m the only one
being stressed out here, like you know, why, just whatever it is, you know. It’s
like well, you know I kind of signed up for this by being here, like, like this kind
of gung ho, like stressful, gotta get things done now, type of a, type of a learning
and working environment. You know, it just makes you more aware of, you
know, of all the different kinds of facets of your own culture.
Frank lives in a hostel that is in one of the city’s wealthiest districts. Sometimes referred
to as “Beverly Hills,” the district is home to a McDonald’s, Hard Rock Café, and even a Hooters
restaurant. His assertion that he could truly get a new point of view might seem dubious given
that he is surrounded by so many Western chains. Yet, meeting Frank at the Spanish class
39
indicates that he is not confined to the city’s tourist district. He uses the public transportation
system, demonstrates an understanding of the Spanish language, frequents group intercambios
(language exchange events), and has several local friends.
Throughout the interview, Frank indicates that money is his biggest traveling hindrance.
He rather quickly made his way from Cusco, Peru, where he taught English classes, through
Ecuador and into Colombia. “But if I had all the money in the world, I’d probably do, you know,
like an entire South America thing, or Europe thing. I’ve kind of already done the Europe thing,
but you know, like, you know, I’d just travel more and then [trails off].”
He claims he would still stay in hostels:
Hostels are a good place to meet people, and I like not being excessive, I guess,
you know, like, I guess traveling all around South America is kind of excessive,
for some; but, uh, I guess I just like being frugal. I don’t think I’d go out and buy
lavish dinners or whatever, but, I don’t know I might buy more rounds of beer for
people at the bar [laughs]. I might, like, you know that type of thing. You know, I
don’t think I’d stay in five-star hotels even if I had five trillion dollars.
He also claims that if he possessed more money he would be more inclined to do “weekend
trips” that he is currently forgoing due to budget concerns.
Frank undoubtedly watches his budget. He often turns down my invitations to eat at
certain restaurants or skip town for a weekend due to a desire to stretch his budget. Despite such
frugality, he is not entirely averse to spending more if it is considered a good deal. For example,
he purchases a higher priced, locally micro-brewed beer at an intercambio event. Since he has
previously bought the cheapest of the mass produced national brands when ordering beer, I ask
him about the change. He says that he prefers the local beer, but that it is often almost double the
price of the other beer. However, this particular café has the local beer priced only slightly more
40
than the national brand, so it makes sense to take advantage of the good deal. I also hear him
recommend a higher priced tour over another similar one because he claims it offers more for
your money. These examples highlight the fact that he actively chooses the degree of his
frugalness based on perceived value.
Frank explains during the interview that he rarely consults his Lonely Planet Guidebook.
According to him, it sometimes helps with decisions about which places “to hike around.” He
also indicates that recommendations from locals and other travelers are helpful for this purpose
as well. I also note that he fosters the relationships he builds outside of the hostel and that they
often result in invitations to activities that include a wide variety of people, including other
travelers, foreign exchange students, host family guests, and locals. It is also common to see one
or more of these individuals stop by the hostel to visit Frank.
The maps in the guidebook are good, according to Frank. However, many of the other
items are not useful. “I think the things that they suggest for me to do are usually out of my price
range. Like almost always the lodging is out of my price range, I just don’t look at them at all for
lodging.” He does state that prices being listed for attractions and museums are helpful, as it can
allow him to select those that are free of charge. He claims that the prices listed are accurate.
Frank says he uses hostelbookers.com to decide which hostel to stay in. He says that the
reviews on the site are “really important” and more specifically the number of reviews because it
means people frequent the hostel. He also cites price and location as important factors. He claims
that he often follows up personal recommendations from other travelers by finding the hostel on
41
the booking site, and that at times these recommendations are ignored if the individually simply
states the hostel “was clean and I had a good time there.”
He mentions that one particular hostel that was once recommended by a fellow traveler
was not on the site, so he opted to choose one that was listed with the site because of already
having an account with hostelbookers.com. He says he never uses tripadvisor.com or other
forums. He claims getting recommendations from locals can be difficult because it is harder to
“strike up a conversation” with them, but that he takes their advice if it is offered.
He likes his hostels to have Wi-Fi, but it is not a necessity if the hostel is in a good
location and cheap. He reiterates that price and location are his most important factors. “Yeah,
good location and cheap is pretty much mostly what I care about. And safe, that’s probably a part
of location.” He says that having access to in-house laundry is nice, but that it is usually cheaper
to find a local spot providing the service.
Frank is traveling with some digital technology. He has a laptop, a basic Kindle eReader
that does not provide a web browser, and a point-and-shoot digital camera. I see him use his
laptop while at the hostel and he brings his Kindle with him to the Spanish class since it has a
Spanish-English dictionary. Despite attending a wide variety of functions with Frank, I never
once see him use his camera. I also rarely use my camera in his presence. However, several
photos of us exist as a result of others taking the photos and sharing them electronically via
social media sites.
He also has a rather basic phone from home that allows for local phone calls and text
messaging after purchasing a SIM card that uses one of the national cell phone networks. I also
42
have local service after purchasing the cheapest phone I can find shortly after my arrival. More
often than not we communicate via email or online chat, as purchasing credits to use on the
phone can become expensive. However, the phones do permit us to quickly make changes to
plans or meet up on short notice.
The length of a trip has a bearing on what Frank does while in a given location. “If I’m
going to stay somewhere for a while I don’t see the tourist attractions maybe even ever [laughs].”
However, a quick stopover in a city can result in a full itinerary for a day or two. He returns to
the discussion of budgeting by saying that if something costs money it has “to be pretty freaking
cool.” He claims that there is often plenty of free stuff to do and that word of mouth
recommendations are sufficient for determining what he would like to see in a location.
Frank occasionally writes about his travel experiences in a journal. He claims that
Facebook and email also help him record memories. He has not bought anything to serve as a
memory of the trip or to give to friends or family, but he intends on buying some paintings or
pictures. He says that the people he meets are what he remembers most, and that he uses social
networking to stay in touch with these individuals. He estimates that he stays in contact with
them for about a year before the relationship usually fades.
His usage of social media and email increases while he is traveling. He claims it is useful
for building relationships while traveling. “I’m traveling a lot. I’m kind of, you know meeting
people and then I leave, and then I meet more people and then I leave. So like, maybe it’s kind of
like I want permanent human connection, or something. If I were living at home and I saw my
friends all the time then, you know, I would have that just normal regular connection.” He states
43
that making lasting friendships while traveling can be difficult, but that digital connections can
serve as a substitute. He also mentions using couchsurfing.org to find intercambio partners or
events.
Frank was warned by friends and family about the dangers of traveling to South America,
and he claims it is the second most dangerous continent in the world, after Africa. However, after
spending a rather significant amount of time there, he disagrees with their reservations. He states
that he “felt safe” and that the onus is on the traveler to know which places to avoid after certain
hours or altogether. He states that this information can be found out rather quickly in casual
conversation.
He does retell a story of an attempted robbery at knife point only a few blocks from a
hostel where he was once staying, but says he just put up his hands and walked away because it
was noon and he did not think the man would stab him. Luckily, his intuition was correct and the
man did not follow him down the busy street. This experience does not stop him from endorsing
the destination as a place for all types of travelers to visit.
I do not get the formal chance to tell Frank goodbye before returning home. However, he
does reach out to me about a month after I last see him, via the chat function of an email service.
We briefly discuss his ongoing travels and he asks how things are going back home and what
plans I may have for the future.
44
Juan
I find a flight provided by a local carrier from Medellin to Cali. The ticket costs 60 USD
as compared to 36 USD for the bus, which is an 18 hour excursion round-trip. Purchasing the
ticket is not easy, as for some reason the website refuses to accept my credit card. I speak with
several other Westerners who tell me they gave up purchasing through the company because of
the same problems. I call customer service and am told I can reserve my flight online and pay at
one of several pay centers across the city. I visit multiple locations claiming to provide the
service before I am finally directed to one that is willing to process my payment. I can certainly
understand how travelers become frustrated with the process.
I decide to travel to Cali for two reasons. The first being that I have never been there, and
the second is to visit a friend I made on a previous trip that lives there. Her name is Natalia and
we remained connected via social media after meeting. Our interaction is pretty minimal, but
Natalia did set me up with an old university friend of hers to show me and my friend around
Bogota on an earlier visit to Colombia.
I send Natalia a message through social media and explain my plan to visit. She is excited
about the prospect of us reuniting and assures me that I am going to enjoy Cali. Natalia tells me
that her mom has an ill friend staying the first two nights of my trip, but that I can stay at their
home for the last two. I am hesitant to readily accept her offer, as I am unsure how her boyfriend
might react to the news. Our relationship has been completely platonic, and was so even during
our first meeting, when she was single. However, I realize that perception can often trump
reality; I tell her I will book a hostel for just the first two nights and see how things develop.
45
A friend of mine from Medellin has been to Cali and claims that he did not care much for
the hostel where he stayed. He complains that it was not all that impressive and suggests that I
look into other accommodations. I find a hostel listed on hostelbookers.com that sounds
interesting. It has overwhelmingly positive reviews about the hostel and its local owners, and is
competitively priced. I use my credit card and book the first two nights there.
I also ask my friend about cheap transportation from the airport into the city. He
apologizes that he cannot offer a suggestion, explaining that he traveled with a group of friends
and they all split the cost of a taxi. I do some research online (by simply conducting a Google
search) and find a website detailing how I can pay for a small bus to take me from the airport to
an inter-city bus terminal in town. Catching a taxi from there to my hostel is far cheaper than
hiring a direct taxi outside of the airport. I use this advice upon arriving, and make it to my hostel
without issue.
Upon arriving I realize that the hostel is pretty empty. Despite booking a bunk in a six
person mixed dorm, I am alone. This is not much of a surprise considering that the hostel seems
fairly new based on the information I saw online. While the reviews were positive, they dated
back less than eighteen months and there were fewer in number when compared to other hostels
that were listed in Cali. The hostel itself is a modern home in the heart of a nice residential area.
It is a several minute walk to anything commercial, and several more minutes to the intra-city
bus stop.
Natalia, who I called shortly after landing, is waiting in the living room when I arrive.
We have plans to grab lunch before she has to get back to study for an upcoming comprehensive
46
final for her master’s program. Despite not living nearby, she knows of a restaurant within
walking distance. We have lunch and catch up. She draws some maps with points of interest for
me to visit. After finishing, we return to the hostel and she tells me she will stop by later to take
me salsa dancing.
Andres, the hostel owner, has joined our conversation and explains that he is planning to
take some of the guests to the same dance club she is mentioning. He claims that he will make a
reservation for a table big enough to accommodate all of us. Before leaving, Natalia educates me
on how to use the intra-city bus system and explains her map. Andres offers me a copy of the
map that the hostel provides, which has bus stops noted. He tells Natalia not to worry, explaining
that all a traveler needs is a map.
I settle into the common room of the hostel after Natalia leaves. Andres’ sister, and
business partner, offers me freshly baked sweets on the house. She explains that the items in the
fridge are purchased through the honor system by keeping tally of what you take on a sheet
attached to the fridge.
There is not much going on after my snack, and Natalia will not be coming to meet me
for several more hours. I decide to go check out one of the places on Natalia’s map. I walk to the
bus stop and eventually figure out which bus I should be looking for. After arriving at my stop, I
start walking in the direction indicated on the map.
I get slightly confused at one point and end up continuing on a street rather than veering
to the left as I should. I end up in a park and begin to wonder if I am lost. A group of local young
men see me and excitedly exclaim, “Papi, venga! Venga! (Daddy, come! Come!)” I quickly turn
47
back in the direction whence I came, and duck behind a building to consult my map again. Sure
enough, I am lost. I get my bearings and finally make it to my destination, a cultural park that
hosts some events and has stores selling trinkets and other souvenirs particular to Cali. Most of
the guests seem to be domestic tourists or inhabitants of the city, as I do not notice any other
Westerners. I look around and eat some dinner before walking back to the bus stop.
When I return to the hostel I finally see other guests. I meet a Dutch couple in their mid20s. I also meet Juan, a man from Mexico who is approaching 30. They all say they are planning
on going out salsa dancing with Andres. I tell them I am waiting for my friend to stop by and that
we will be joining them later. They leave and shortly thereafter Natalia arrives. I tell her about
my experience getting lost and she has a hearty laugh. She suggests that it was smart not to go
talk to them, as that part of town can be dangerous. She later teases me by retelling the story in
front of me on separate occasions to her friends and boyfriend.
Natalia and I call a taxi and make it to the club. We find the group from the hostel and
join them at their table. The club is an almost even split of foreigners and locals. Natalia tells me
that it is the most famous salsa club among tourists. We will visit a different one on another
evening and her assertion proves correct based on its dearth of Westerners, save me. Andres
suggests we order a bottle of aguardiente (local liquor made from sugar cane) to split. Everyone
is agreeable to the idea, so we get one for the table.
We drink and dance. Natalia shows me some dance moves and has fun teasing me about
my propensity to inadvertently shimmy my shoulders. Natalia also takes Juan on the dance floor
for a lesson. Andres and Natalia dance together and put on an impressive show. The Dutch
48
woman refuses to get on the dance floor, so Andres tries coaxing her by insisting that it is fun.
He is unsuccessful and her boyfriend is too. Finally, an older man that the couple happens to
know convinces her to give it a try.
Some of the members of the group begin dancing with other patrons of the club. One
particular Western woman is tearing up the dance floor, and I am curious to see if she can make
anyone look like they know what they are doing. She accepts my offer to dance and I manage to
only step on her once. She tells me she is living and working in Cali at the moment. I thank her
for the dance and rejoin the group.
Natalia tells me she needs to leave, but that we will meet up for lunch the next day. She
says goodbye to the group and I walk her outside before bidding her goodnight. I go back inside
and rejoin the group. About this time Andres is suggesting another bottle of aguardiente, but
finds far fewer willing accomplices this time. I explain that I am done with liquor for the evening
and will simply buy a beer, if anything at all.
After making some conversation with our group, I see a woman who looks extremely
familiar. It finally dawns on me that I recognize her from a hostel in Guatapé, Colombia. I ask if
she was recently there and she says yes. She suddenly remembers me too, and asks if the friend I
was with in Guatapé recently visited Cali. I reply that he had, and she tells me she saw him at a
café a couple of weekends ago. It turns out that she is British, but is living in Cali at the moment.
Her trip to Guatapé just happened to coincide with ours.
I return to our table but do not see Andres. I look near the bar and discover him talking to
two local women. Juan and I engage in a brief dialogue before he leaves to strike up a
49
conversation with a woman across the way. The Dutch man begins talking to me and asks about
traveling without a significant other. He tells me he enjoys traveling with his girlfriend, but that
he envies my freedom. He gently probes for details about my experiences with women during
my trip.
Luckily, Andres rejoins us before too long. He says that we should go to another place
that stays open later. The Dutch couple explains that they are tired and would like to go back to
the hostel. Andres suggests that we head back there to drop them off and then proceed to the next
location. He also explains that the local women he met want to join us. Juan, who has just
returned to the table by himself, thinks the idea is a good one. Despite my nap, I am not feeling
up to staying out all night. However, I realize that if I stay at the hostel it would just be the
Dutch couple and me, as there are no other guests that evening. I decide that I might as well go
with Juan and Andres rather than serve as a third wheel.
We all leave the club and I realize that Andres drove the group here in his personal
vehicle. The five of us get into his car and the two local women follow us on a moped. Andres
lets the couple inside and helps the women put their moped in the garage. They join us in the car
and Juan and I introduce ourselves. We arrive at a dance club and park the car nearby.
After entering, Andres suggests splitting a bottle of rum. I again state that I do not want
to consume any more liquor. However, after taking to the dance floor I see the waitress bring a
bottle over to our table. We dance for a while and I reluctantly accept a mixed drink from
Andres. After an hour or so at the club we all seem to be hitting a wall. Andres tells one of the
women to grab the rum bottle, which is about half full, so that we can take it with us. We leave
50
the club, but stop at a stand selling some grilled meat just outside. We each order something to
eat.
One of the women starts flirting with me on the way home. I am under the impression
that Andres is interested in her, so I do my best to politely thwart her advances. I feel like Andres
would not be too upset at me since I am a paying guest in his establishment, but I still feel
awkward. I try to strike up a conversation with the woman’s friend, but this visibly upsets my
admirer. Suddenly, there in the shared backseat with the women, I realize that I am in a no-win
situation.
We return to the hostel and help the women retrieve their moped. I have not been keeping
tabs on anyone’s individual alcohol consumption, but know that around half the bottle of rum is
missing. I question if the woman is capable of driving and she informs me she has not been
drinking. Her friend corroborates her claim and they assure us they will make it home without
issue. Andres wants to follow them home to make sure this occurs. Juan and I bid the women
goodnight and the three of them set off. Juan later confesses that Andres was indeed interested in
the woman, but that he was not mad at me for the way things unfolded.
The next morning I wake up with a dry mouth and slight headache. I go downstairs and
am greeted by a bright-eyed, bushy-tailed Dutch couple. The man rhetorically asks how I feel. I
tell him it is nothing some coffee and breakfast cannot cure as I venture into the nearby kitchen
to concoct my remedy. He asks how the night ended and I give him a condensed version of the
story. I ask if they might have time for an interview, but he explains they are getting ready to
51
leave soon. Just as I sit down at the table with the Dutch couple, Juan joins us. He offers to sit
outside and participate in an interview while we sip on some coffee.
Juan lives in Mexico and has a bachelor’s degree in business administration. He is
currently in the process of starting his own company, but recently had a job that covered his rent
in addition to paying about 32,000 USD a year. Juan’s job required him to travel and covered the
costs associated with hotels, but he also takes personal trips. He tells me he has been taking trips
in a backpacker-like manner for nine years.
Juan rarely makes plans in advance. “I really don’t have a plan. When I arrive, I just start
talking to people, you know, and then I make the decision where to go.”
Juan uses hostelworld.com to find a hostel. He claims that the reviews are not that
important to him. Juan visited a different hostel upon arriving in Cali because it had the best
reviews, but he left because he felt it “didn’t look that good.”
Juan prefers hostels with many of the amenities you might find at home. “I prefer, you
know, to find a place like, where you feel like home.” He states, “It is very important, you know,
to have a nice kitchen [I ask him to repeat himself] a kitchen so you can cook, nice laundry,
Internet access.”
Juan has more disposable income than he did as an adolescent, and as a result is less
price-sensitive when selecting hostels. I ask him about what factors are important when looking
for hostels. “Well it used to be the price, you know? I was looking, when I was 19, when I start
traveling it was always the price. But now that I’m available to afford – I can stay in a hotel now,
52
but I, I really enjoy being in a hostel, you know? To be able to – to meet other persons from
different countries. Yeah, in a hotel I’m going to be, you know, in my room – that kind of stuff.”
Juan enjoys traveling because of the perspective it offers. “What I like about traveling is
that I can see my country from another perspective.” He explains that he achieves this by visiting
destinations outside of his country. “In Mexico we have this cultural thing that is called
malinchismo. We prefer other countries. Other things that come from outside. [Pauses] So every
time I travel I fall in love more with my customs, you know, because I am always talking to
persons and telling the good things about my country.”
Escaping the weight of large-scale societal problems back home, such as “corruption,” is
another motivation for travel according to Juan. “When I travel it’s like, you’re a foreigner, and
you’re not too deep into the problems of the society. So you’re just going around, you know?”
Juan says his friends and family were fine with the idea of traveling to Colombia, but did not
want him to stay away from home for very long. He thinks that Colombia is presented unfairly in
the media, and that it is not as dangerous as it is made out to be.
He makes the same claim of Mexico, and says he is frequently asked about whether or
not it is safe to visit. He says, “Mexico is not dangerous now. The thing is that, it’s not that safe.
And here it’s the same. So the media is playing a really important [pauses] influence on people. I
found Colombia really safe now.”
I ask Juan what kind of technology he travels with. He says:
I always try to, to travel light. So I don’t want to, uh, get attached to things.
Because you, you always have to be, you know – because you are staying at
hostels and there’s not so much security, everybody going in and out. So, it’s
pretty hard to, you know, bring your computer and, you know, to feel safe. So I
53
just started using my – this is my first time traveling with my cellphone.
He claims that he normally leaves his cell phone at home. The phone does not allow him to
access the Internet, and he goes to an Internet café if he wants to get online.
Interestingly enough, Juan does not travel with a camera. “No, I don’t have a camera.”
He prefers to take mental pictures. “I have weird thing I always use, you know, the memories I
have – like a camera, so I’m always remembering.”
Juan tries to document his trips by collecting admission tickets or bills. “I always keep
the entrance to the places I go.” I ask him, “Like a ticket?” He replies, “Yeah, a ticket. I have a
box full with a lot of things. [Pauses] Yeah, sometimes I keep also bills.”
He states that he will occasionally buy gifts for his family, “but it’s not that common.” He
does not buy any souvenirs for himself.
Juan practically shuns digital technology while traveling. He has accounts for Facebook
and Skype, but uses the former less when on the road and the latter not at all. He claims not to
seek out online forums for travel advice, but does admit to occasionally conducting Google
searches for travel information.
Juan will look at a Lonely Planet Guide if there is one available at a hostel, but does not
own one. He thinks that it is a “good tool,” but worries that he might browse it while back home
and that it could inadvertently give him expectations for upcoming travel. He feels that would
take away from the “escape” of travel. He claims to seek out little advice from formal sources.
“My plan is just to have the map of the city, that’s it.”
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Natalia and some of her friends pick me up later that night to celebrate a birthday in the
group. We head to a New Orleans’ themed restaurant and bar that has a live band playing. I ask
Natalia if the owner is from New Orleans. She explains that the place is owned by a local who
just happened to visit the city and really liked it. She asks where Juan is, and I say he left the
hostel earlier in the afternoon and I had not seen him since.
I have his phone number so she tells me to call him. Upon reaching him, I give him the
address and he catches a taxi to come join us. We all sit and talk for a while before the driver
announces she needs to get home. Natalia explains that we will take a taxi back, and not to worry
about us. We stay a while longer and eventually the rest of us grow tired. We suggest sharing one
taxi and making multiple stops. Juan explains that he is not ready to head home, so he decides to
stick around and explore some of the other nightlife options.
I leave the hostel the next day and do not see Juan to say goodbye. However, Juan offers
me his email address via a text message shortly after we go separate ways. I send him a brief
message not long after returning home, and he gives me a quick reply. This was our last contact
to date.
Jack and Oliver
Upon taking the no-frills airline from Medellin to Cartagena, Colombia, I pay for a flat
rate taxi at the airport and get dropped off on Media Luna street. The street is in the district of
Getsemaní. The district hosts a backpacker enclave segregated from the Western tourism bubble,
55
which is housed in an adjacent district comprised of international chain hotels and a Hard Rock
Café. I check out two different hostels before settling on the one with air-conditioning for about
one USD more.
I open the door to my shared hostel room in Cartagena and am greeted by Jack. He and
Oliver, another guest in the room, introduce themselves. After exchanging basic information
about ourselves, the conversation turns to discussing our current respective trips. I explain that
my travel includes a research component and ask if they are willing to be interviewed. They both
agree, but Jack says he intends to take a nap before doing much of anything else.
Oliver and I leave the room. I want to watch the sunset and invite Oliver to join me, but
he is waiting on his dive instructor to stop by and review an exam. He says he would like to grab
some ceviche (uncooked seafood in lime juice) for dinner after his meeting. A couple overhears
him talking about diving and begins to inquire about his experiences. I head off towards the
coast, but am too late to catch the sun sinking into the water. I return to the hostel to see that Jack
has woken up just in time to join us for dinner.
The three of us ask a staff member, who turns out to be the owner of the hostel, about
where to find reasonably priced ceviche. He speaks highly of a restaurant not far away and we set
out in that direction. Upon seeing the price of the dish and the portion size, Oliver claims it is too
much for too little. I suggest splitting a portion of ceviche and ordering something else as
entrees. It is determined that the dish is too small to share and we decide to seek out something
different.
56
While looking over a menu outside a restaurant, Jack is greeted by a group of younger
Western women. They leave after a brief exchange and he explains that he met them a couple of
days ago. We ultimately pick a restaurant that does not serve ceviche, but that does have a wide
variety of budget-friendly menu items. We discuss a number of topics related to travel over
dinner and then head back to the hostel. I teach both men some of the colloquial phrases
particular to Colombia, and they explain that they have struggled to pick up much Spanish so far.
Upon returning to the hostel, Jack is well rested with a full stomach and ready for an interview.
Jack is a 25 year old from the United States and holds a bachelor’s degree. He recently
quit his job and sold his car to begin traveling. This is his first time traveling in a backpacker-like
manner and I meet him two and a half weeks into his journey.
I ask him about his motivations for traveling. He replies:
Well, there are so many of them. Uh, let’s see, I was kind of tired of routine, you
know. Didn’t like my job, my job was pretty horrible. I did marketing for a bridal
company, so it was me and thirteen women in an office that were all older than
my mother. So it was pretty terrible…I couldn’t believe I lasted a whole year
there. And then, uh, I had a friend that was getting married to a Mexican girl in
Mexico. So, uh, about a month or a few weeks before, uh, I decided I was going
to sell my car and use all my money to travel, see the world a little bit. Because, I
kind of felt like I was missing out on something, you know.
He explains that he wanted to travel the whole world, but that it would prove “too
expensive and time consuming.” He claims that it would be possible, but that it would result in a
“lifestyle change.” He views his current trip as an extended vacation of six months to a year,
which will allow for a “different outlook on life.” Jack says the experience will allow him to “see
the world through his own eyes.” He asserts that the United States does not have a “culture of
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travel” and that those who do elect to backpack usually select Europe as their destination.
Therefore, backpacking South America will allow him a different experience.
Jack uses hostelworld.com to select his first hostel. He also consults LonelyPlanet.com
and Wikitravel.org in an effort to do research before leaving home. He claims he could have
done more research, but didn’t want his trip to “be too planned out.” Safety is his primary
concern and the main reason he researches the destinations prior to setting off on his trip. He also
consults friends back home that had either been to South America or had backpacked elsewhere.
He is concerned with “how [you] get around and how you interact with people you can’t speak
the same language.”
Despite consulting the Lonely Planet website, Jack does not own one of their travel
guides. He sometimes borrows guide books from other hostel guests, but does not view them as
vital. “I don’t think it’s necessary, really. I thought there was enough information online.”
He claims he does not look for much in a hostel, but does consult the ratings on
hostelworld.com when determining where to stay. Prices are also checked, but he claims they are
generally similar, and as a result ratings are more of a deciding factor. He is currently in his
fourth hostel and did not book it in advance. The overwhelming majority of the hostels in
Cartagena are in the same backpacker enclave, and as a result it is easy to sneak a peek at several
before deciding on one. I also employ the same tactic upon arriving to the city. Although, he
admits that he may be more careful about doing research on hostels prior to arriving if he ends up
staying at a “shitty one.”
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Jack comes across as rather indifferent about where he stays, but external factors and
amenities seem to play into his decision making. There is not much of a difference in the hostels
he has seen so far. He admits that ratings are not all that important, unless there is something that
really stands out. Free breakfast is a plus, and so are certain extras. If the weather is going to be
hot, he would love to have a pool at his disposal; and he does tell of staying in a hostel with a
lower ranking than some others nearby simply because it had a pool. He stayed in a private room
at his first hostel, as he “thought that would be a good way to break into it.” Jack claims it
allowed for “solitude” but also a chance to “socialize.”
Facebook is something Jack is using on his travels, but mostly to add people and not
necessarily to interact with them. He explains that it can be useful for recommendations or to see
if he might run into them later on. He does use it “to stay in contact with people back home, too.”
His usage of Facebook is “definitely less” since he started traveling, although he does admit that
his usage was inflated due to frequenting the site to pass time at a job he was unhappy with back
home. He estimates that he uses it once or twice a week at the moment and that it is “easier to
stay off it when you are doing interesting things.” He laughingly adds, “Although, maybe I
should go on to show off to people that I am doing interesting stuff.”
Jack is traveling with some mobile computing and other digital devices. He does not
initially want to bring a phone, but does end up bringing his iPhone “just as a Wi-Fi, uh, thing if
[he] needed to use a map, or check emails, or book flights, or whatever.” He decides to bring it
because he was unsure of “what the computer situation would be like at hostels.” He also packs
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his iPod and a “big” digital video camcorder that is capable of taking still photos. He admits that
the camcorder “was the thing [he] was most nervous about bringing.”
Jack writes about his travels in a journal a couple of times a week. He occasionally films
a video blog to record his thoughts and also films what he is doing from time to time. His
electronic correspondences back home also serve as censored stories for later. “I’m kind of
sending like, uh, group emails to people. Where it’s just like, uh, it’s like a summary of what I’m
doing. Kind of more or less for myself, so I can check all of them so I don’t forget anything that I
did. Oh, I don’t put any like – my parents and grandparents are on there, so I don’t put
everything on there.”
He did buy some items to serve as gifts and sent them with a friend who was returning
home after the first part of his trip, which was Mexico. He also plans on buying some more gifts
and sending them in a package to his parents during the trip. He is weary about traveling with the
items, but doesn’t mention space as an issue. “I mean, that’s the plan, I don’t know. I don’t want
to carry all of these things I buy around with me, I don’t trust the areas. As far as souvenirs for
myself, not, not particularly. I figure that is what the journal and video camera are really doing
for me.”
Jack has not had an opportunity to follow up on many recommendations since he is in the
early stages of his traveling. He does say he was pleased with the one recommendation he
pursued, which he received from another backpacker he met on the road. He also has several
others he plans on looking into upon arriving in other destinations down the road.
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His parents are concerned about his selection of destinations. “My parents were pretty
freaked out. Uh, they, well my mom especially and my dad was kind of, thought it was cool, and
then he started freaking out when I was about to leave.” His friends seem more interested in the
fact that he is traveling in the manner that he is than his destinations. He claims:
Everyone has their take, about that I’m looking for something, like I’m not just
traveling, like trying to gain experience or just have fun. But everyone thinks I’m
off trying to do soul searching, which, which, you know, isn’t that I won’t at some
point, but it’s really just to break out of the ordinary and do something different. I
don’t know if that means they think I need to do soul search, I don’t know what
that really says about them, but [trails off].
He does go on to claim that everyone has been really supportive.
The portrayal of certain places in Latin America is inaccurate in Jack’s opinion. “Mexico
is kind of, in the US, is kind of viewed kind of like a shithole. But when I was in Mexico City I
thought it was, it was really great. It was, uh, culturally, it was, it was one of the coolest places
I’ve been to.” He admits that he does not know too much about how other destinations, like
Panama and Colombia, are perceived. He does recommend that “everyone” visit all of the places
he has visited so far. He laments the fact that many people in the United States rarely visit Latin
America, or that when they do it is to “poshier or more resort-like areas” or “bigger” places such
as “Brazil” or “Argentina.”
Upon completing the interview with Jack I sit down with Oliver.
Oliver is 24 years old and is originally from New Zealand, but was living in Australia
prior to his travels. He has been traveling for about seven months. I ask him about the first time
he traveled in a backpacker manner. He says:
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Uh, I’ve done – I did a trip in 2010, where I, um – it was only three – four and
half weeks, but I did a bit of time in hostels. I didn’t really know much about
them before, um, we just did it to save money. I was traveling with my girlfriend,
but um, yeah, it turned out quite good for the uh, social atmosphere, so [trails off].
I ask him about his motivations for traveling. He claims:
Um, to be honest I had a six year work contract with the military, so when that
ended I, uh, decided I wanted to continue on. So instead of looking for another job
I thought I’d stall the process and go traveling basically, so [pauses] I guess
basically all my motivations for what I do day to day since I’ve been traveling the
only thing I planned was Machu Picchu, and a bit of – I’ve continued uh, doing
sport since I’ve been traveling. Those are the only two things that I wanted to get
done, that I wanted to do.
Oliver claims he picked his initial destination, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil in an effort to
pursue his interest in Brazilian Jujitsu. After some time in Brazil, he traveled to Peru to meet up
with a friend, and “that was when [he] did Machu Picchu.” Afterwards he stayed in Lima due to
finding another club for Brazilian Jujitsu. His time in Lima resulted in working and meeting a
travel companion. He claims to have experienced a different style of travel at that point:
So I stayed in Lima for that, and ended up working. At that point and time I was
just basically looking to stay in areas for long periods of time, but then I met a girl
and ended up traveling for close to two months with her and she had a different
style of traveling. So, uh, we did things her way, which was really good because I
wouldn’t normally do it that way. So it was, you know, two, three days in each
place, do all the sites. Uh, and it was really good to do that style of backpacking
which I hadn’t done before. I’ve just done long term stays in places.
Before traveling with his new friend, Oliver would use word of mouth recommendations
he received. He would then follow up the recommendation with online research, but claims he
did little research otherwise. He claims that his new travel companion did not have “a solid
itinerary,” but knew about how long she planned to stay in each country. He contrasts her style
of travel with his own by saying, “Whereas for me, it was just one way ticket. Um, I’ll come
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back at Christmas and if I sit in one place for nine months it doesn’t bother me, as long as I’m
happy every day.”
Oliver states that lately he has been doing “trying to do a lot more of the, you know, the
tours you see advertised.” He claims it has been easier to accomplish due to scaling back his
commitment to Brazilian Jujitsu, or what he simply refers to as “sport”:
Yeah, I guess I’m trying to put my sport to one side until the end of the year, just
so I can, um, basically do a little bit more traveling because that allows me to, uh,
I guess get more done in a week in a place because I don’t have to worry about,
uh, going to training and being physically tired or psyching out. I can just
basically wear myself out all day going to see the sites. I can see a place in a
week, whereas you know, nine weeks in Lima I didn’t see much at all because I
was going to training most days. So, I’d probably go to a museum or something
like that.
Several factors play into how Oliver looks for a hostel, including which country he is
currently in and his mood, although the two might not be mutually exclusive. He says, “Depends
what I’m feeling at the time. In Peru I was looking for, I don’t know why, but I was looking for a
party hostel. Um, whereas here, now I’ve sort of changed my opinion where I’d rather have a bit
of a, a chillout hostel.” He also states, “I guess Peru has a lot more emphasis on the party hostels.
Big chain hostels, you know, go around Peru or stay in the major cities and stay in the same
hostel company in each place. Whereas, here they seem to be a bit more – I don’t know if they
are, but they seem independent, you know.” Oliver does not discuss any possible connection
between a seemingly abundant offering of “party hostels” in Peru and his admitted desire to seek
them out.
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Oliver looks for a few amenities in hostels. He thinks social areas are important because
they “put people in the same area.” A kitchen is “handy” but not necessarily important. A lack of
hot water can prove to be a “deal breaker,” but he hasn’t viewed it as too important lately, due to
staying on the warm Caribbean coast. He states that price is important, but claims that hostels
“all tend to be around the same price anyway, so [he] hasn’t had to worry too much about price.”
He states that “it is good having lockers, but at the same time when they don’t have lockers, you
sort of feel like, alright, maybe they don’t need lockers.” He worries that too many lockers could
be an indictment of the “sort of people” frequenting the hostel. Wi-Fi is also something Oliver
“definitely” wants.
Oliver currently uses multiple sources to find hostels. He carries a Lonely Planet
guidebook, but sees it as a “backup plan.” He claims to use it when “lazy,” or when he hasn’t
bothered to do any research beforehand. He retells stories of using it to seek out hostels that
didn’t exist anymore or were at different addresses than those listed. He says now he only uses it
to begin his research, as he follows up the book’s recommendations by doing additional research
online. Despite using Hostelworld.com and reading the reviews, Oliver is weary about who
actually leaves the feedback. He claims overly positive or negative feedback is suspicious, as it
could be left by an owner or competitor, respectively. The source Oliver is most comfortable
with is other travelers. He says, “I generally just go with recommendations from people who
have been to the place I am traveling to…I’d rather hear something from someone who has been
there than, you know, read about it online.” He prefers personal recommendations because, “If
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you talk to someone, you know who they are. You know they’re a travelers and they’ve been
there.”
Oliver does carry digital technology, and uses the Internet frequently. He was traveling
with an iPod with Wi-Fi connectivity, but lost it at the Medellin airport. He has a digital camera
with a removable lens. Facebook is something he has been using almost every day on the road,
as compared to about once a week back home. He prefers Facebook to email:
I mean, I use Facebook probably more than I would an email address. Um, and
that can be handy for, you know when you add people that take a similar route,
even though you might not meet up with them you can sort of see where they’ve
been, if they’re a few days or a few weeks ahead of you can get ideas and ask
questions.
Oliver is making an effort to preserve the memories on his trip. He “attempted to keep a
journal,” but was “not really used to that.” While he has written a “few things,” he finds photos
more useful. He claims that viewing the photos allows him to recall the stories associated with
them. Oliver admits to buying just a few souvenirs, but claims he tries to avoid the practice
altogether. He has bought some art, “just to send home in the post.”
Oliver thinks that the representations of South American destinations are mostly
inaccurate. He finds Rio de Janeiro “really safe,” but attributes it to the upcoming World Cup
and Olympic Games. Oliver speaks of Colombia’s “notorious reputation,” but finds the country
“really nice and really safe.” He does claim he would recommend visiting these places to friends
and family, but says they should heed warnings because that can “avoid a lot of hassle.”
Upon finishing up with my questions, Oliver offers an interesting story about a
conversation he had with a hostel owner who backpacked about a decade ago. The hostel owner
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was amazed with “how different [traveling] is now that you have the Internet and all these other
things like Facebook,” and claimed that “traveling now is incredibly easy.” The man recalled
using sorting through hundreds of messages on boards at cafés to stay in contact with travelers he
had previously met and wanted to reconnect with down the road. Oliver contrasts the man’s
experience with his own by stating, “That sounds like it would be a different experience to what
I’ve had. Whereas I can just quickly jump on Facebook, send an email to someone I saw six
months ago…and that goes to keeping in contact with family as well.” Oliver does think he
would enjoy the older system. He says:
But, yeah, I think that old system with the notice board and the bits of paper, I
think it would be interesting to travel on that to be honest. It would be a good
experience; it’d seem more like an adventure, to be honest. It just – it seems so
easy to, you know, find information. Just jump on the net and find travel blogs,
forums. You know? I use them all myself, so I’m not saying you shouldn’t use
them. But I think it would be interesting for sure, to travel, to travel like, like he
was saying, without the internet at all.
After Oliver and I finish the interview, we return to the bar in the hostel where Jack is
waiting. We spend the evening there talking with each other, the bartender, and the owner who
relieves the bartender for a spell at one point. During our casual conversations I explain that I
have traveled to other places in South America, and Jack asks if we can connect via social
networking in case he needs a recommendation down the road. We talk more about our travels
and other life experiences. At one point, I walk to a nearby store and buy some Colombian potato
chips that I enjoy. I share them with Jack and Oliver as we talk. It is an uneventful evening that
draws to an early close.
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I leave too early the next morning to formally say goodbye to Oliver or Jack, but both had
wished me luck on my continuing travels the night before. Despite my Facebook connection with
Jack, he never reaches out to me for information. I never see him explicitly solicit travel
information in a public manner either. I do, however, see pictures of “interesting stuff” occurring
during his trip from time to time. Oliver and I do not make any connections via email or social
networking.
Alex
I am on a bus headed to a spot on a Caribbean beach in Colombia that comes highly
recommended from another traveler. The bus stops near the entrance of Tayrona National Park
and the German couple with whom I am making small talk get off and bid me farewell. This is
usually the farthest west on the coast that most Westerner travelers go, but I know that I have
about another ten minutes on the bus. As soon as I think I am the only foreigner left on the bus,
another gets on and begins speaking to the driver. I cannot make out exactly what he is saying
based on my position at the back of the bus, but he conducts a rather fluid exchange in Spanish
and takes a seat.
The destination’s website claims that a sign will adorn the road and I begin looking for it
in case the driver forgets where I asked to be dropped off. I am about to remind the driver of my
destination when he stops and tells the most recent passenger that this is where he wants to get
off. I ask if this is my stop as well, and the driver suddenly remembers my original request. He
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tells me this is it and that I need to walk down the dirt road for about fifteen minutes or so. I hop
off the bus and finally see a rather small sign off to the right. I remark that it is a good thing that
the driver knows where it is; otherwise I would have missed it entirely. The other traveler agrees
with me and we strike up a conversation.
While walking, I learn that the man’s name is Alex and that he is in his late 20s from the
United States. He is on a brief vacation with no return date set. Alex was at Tayrona, but decided
to check out this spot because he was not enjoying his time at the park. I tell him I am
considering going to the park sometime in the next few days and he encourages me to rethink my
decision. While he says there were not people “smoking pot or anything,” he got the vibe that the
place was inundated with some strange characters.
This particular place does not provide the opportunity to reserve anything via the Internet,
so I ask the receptionist to confirm that the bunk I reserved via phone is available. Alex asks
about a bunk, but is told it may be reserved for someone arriving later. He opts to splurge by
renting a straw-thatched hut that is normally meant for two. It only costs about five USD a night
more, and he says it’s not a big deal.
As soon as we unpack, Alex and I rent some surfboards and he purchases a lesson. We
are able to get in a little bit of time before sundown, but I call it quits before the sun fades. He
comes in shortly thereafter and cleans up. He agrees to an interview while we wait on dinner,
which is served at once to all the guests who care to purchase it.
Alex holds a bachelor’s degree and has been working within his trade long enough to
command a salary in excess of 100,000 USD. Despite living in a city with a high cost of living,
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Alex probably has more disposable income than any other traveler I meet during my journey due
to his high income, lack of dependents, and designs to immediately resume a high-paying career
at the end of his travels.
When I ask Alex about his motivations for traveling, he gives a one word response:
“Escape.” He lets that sink in before also adding that he wants “to see the world.” Alex claims
his parents did not promote the idea of travel when he was growing up, and that his trips are a
source of pride and a reflection of his independence.
He retells a story about pursuing his first international trip, which was “completely free”
through a specific program. His father was against his initial foray abroad due to safety concerns,
but also because it was “not something he would have done.” He alludes to the pride he finds in
traveling when he states, “So for me to, like, go, because they never really instilled travel in me,
it was like a huge sense of accomplishment that I’m here and I’m independent and I did this
myself.”
Alex expounds on the idea of travel as escape by allowing it to serve as a reprieve from
the stresses at home. “In terms of escape, I think, uh, it’s cool to be able to get away from your
problems, right?” He talks about hitting a proverbial wall with his work and moving on from a
relationship and turning to travel for escape. “I said I need to get the hell out of the United States
because I can’t think anymore. I just can’t concentrate, and this is like an allotted period of time
where I can just get away. Or I broke up with a girlfriend and it was just too hard to keep
thinking, and I think about her all the time now, but it was just too hard to be in ---- for that time.
So I just said, ‘I need to get away.’”
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In addition to travel serving as a medium of escape, Alex suggests it can also provide a
window into other ways of life. Alex claims that life came fairly easy for him. He tells of an
affluent childhood followed by few difficulties in completing college and finding a “good job.”
He says:
I like to see how other people live. I like seeing that yeah, I’ve got one pair of
shorts that have a huge hole in them and it’s okay. Some, some person you met on
the bus will loan you a pair of shorts or, you know, somebody will give you a
moto ride when you don’t have any money. And, I like seeing other parts of the
world, that, you know, my sheltered little life that I grew up in never really
afforded me. You’re not going to see that in a textbook.
Alex admits that he has not done much independent international traveling, and is still
perfecting the planning process. He contrasts a three week trip to Honduras that he took earlier in
the year, which was his first in a backpacker-manner, with his current trip. He states:
I printed out like, lists of like ‘Moonguide’ and ‘Lonely Planet forum.’ And, uh, I
had – you know, I didn’t buy the book but I basically printed out all this stuff and
I kind of had an itinerary. And this trip, I literally did not even have a hostel to
stay in. So this is, you know, after I got over that first, like initial, scary hump.
He explains that he did buy a guidebook and print a few items out before departing, but that he
arrived in the first city of his trip without a single reservation for lodging or activities.
Upon arriving at the first hostel, which he felt comfortable with based on his initial
research, he began collecting recommendations from other travelers. “It’s like this storytelling in
the hostel. It’s like, you ask like five people, ‘Where are you going? Where did you come? Oh,
what did you like?’ right?”
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He decided to visit this particular destination based on “several” recommendations he
received in Medellin, a city far removed from the coast. He is somewhat surprised that no one
along the coast claims to know much about this place despite being so close. He claims:
Not a single person talked about this. ‘Oh, I haven’t heard much about that.’ Or, ‘I
didn’t really know.’ It was like the story from back in like, a month ago was the
reason why I’m here. Not ‘cause it’s in a guidebook, because it’s not in the
Lonely Planet. It’s not because I found it on the Internet. Because some random
person that I met in a hostel was like, ‘You should go there.’ It’s really cool how
this information gets passed on. It’s way more relevant and way more, um, I think
contextually better for the people that you tend to find in these places because the
person who told it to me told it maybe because I was friendly with him. And then,
I find that I come here and I have a much better vibe than like the place that I just
was where, uh, I read about it in a book. You know, and I didn’t really relate to it
as much and that’s why I got out of there. So, storytelling is cool.
Alex’s use of guidebooks and online forums does not preclude him from conceptualizing
other ways of documenting the travel process in a manner that can assist others. He posits:
I’ve realized that there’s a need for a mob – a better way to do this mobile, right?
With photos, through storytelling, somehow to capture this. Because the problem
is the guidebooks are outdated. Um, the forums are too, too much contextually.
Like, I think there’s too much, too much to read, right? And we’re moving to a
digital world where photos are just worth a thousand words, right? Look at like
Instagram. There needs to be like the Instagram for travel.
He tells me about a project a friend has undertaken to organize travel photos
geographically, allowing a user to browse photos of a single destination from multiple people.
He expresses frustration with printed travel guides. “By the time the books are printed, the shit’s
outdated. Like this place isn’t in any travel book that I’ve read, and it’s awesome.” Alex predicts
that travelers will produce their own informative guides in the future. “We will see the
WikiTravels of the world start to get updated faster. Because, humans – the crowd is going to
start writing the books…The people like you, and me, and other backpackers, we’re going to be
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writing the books. It might not be the perfect review.” He discusses how the information will be
targeted to specific groups of people, either by shared interests or common backgrounds.
Alex does not use any of the hostel booking services online. He says he tried using
couchsurfing.org but it “has a weird dynamic” and “wasn’t really for [him].” The prospect of
having a “local guide” is “cool,” but takes away from the allure of backpacking. “Really when
you’re backpacking I think part of the adventure is like showing up and maybe they say they
don’t have a place.” He tells of arriving at a hostel in Honduras without a reservation and paying
3 USD a night to sleep on a cot the owner usually reserves for friends who visit, due to no other
bunks being available. “I feel like when you open yourself up to the world, the world is going to
open itself back up to you.” He does admit to buying plane tickets in advance (due to fluctuating
prices), but leaves the rest of a trip to chance. “If the hostel doesn’t have availability then it just
wasn’t meant to be that night for me. I mean, very whimsical.”
I ask Alex about what he looks for in a hostel. “I’m not price sensitive.” He explains that
he paid a little more for a cabana instead of a hammock or dorm bunk upon arriving at this
particular destination, and that he has no problem doing such. “I look for experience.” He is not
fond of big hostels and claims that he feels as if he “get[s] lost.” He tells of staying in a
“megahostel” where nobody talked to him. “I hate when people like walk by and they don’t even
say hello.”
Despite his fondness of technology and previously discussed predictions concerning
perpetual updates on travel information, Alex prefers to disconnect himself from time to time
and would prefer if others did too. He says:
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I also don’t really like when hostels have Wi-Fi all the time. Because, when
people have Wi-Fi they just stare at their damn phones the whole night. And I do
it too, yeah. Right before this interview, yeah I had to make sure that my brother
sent me an email. So I jumped on for five seconds, read the email that my brother
sent me and jumped off. So I like hostels that are, you know, not so focused on
the gringo traveler. Like, God forbid, we’re off the fucking Internet for – psht – a
night, right?
Alex states that one of his favorite hostels was run by “a total hippie” who tells guests, “If
you want Internet, walk 30 minutes and go to the Internet café,” because “I don’t have it here.”
The guests of this hostel sit down to “family style dinners” and interact with each other more.
Alex was sick during his stay there and a couple that were also guests cooked for him. He
suggests the offer was related to not being preoccupied with his phone.
If a hostel has Internet on site, Alex does not believe they should charge guests to use it.
He is turned off by hostels that “take advantage of every penny.” He names a hostel located in
Bogota, Colombia that charges for Internet usage, and describes his displeasure. “I thought that
was just like wrong, it wasn’t really in the spirit of, you know, providing a very good service to
people, which would be, you know, limited, but good free Internet.”
Alex has other expectations of hostels that do not pertain to technology. He suggests that
dorms should be clean and that “if the sheets are dirty, that’s really bad.” He also does not want
to feel “jammed in.” He assumes something akin to an incredulous tone when explaining how
one hostel had “bunk beds three high.” Alex claims they were custom made and “the third bunk
was literally like 12 feet up in the air. It was like, it wasn’t – it shouldn’t have been that way, it
was impossible to like, even climb up.” He claims it made him “feel like [he] was in a barrack.”
He summarizes his thoughts on trading the comfort of guests for profits when he asserts, “If
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you’re sacrificing experience to try and earn a buck, then I think there is something that they are
doing wrong.”
A hostel that adopts a particular theme is something Alex enjoys. He stayed in hostels
with multiple themes, such as surfing and salsa dancing. He claims it makes it easier to meet
people interested in similar activities. Alex even has visions of opening up a yoga themed hostel.
However, those that merely feature a party scene are not impressive. “‘This is the party hostel.
We have a big, you know, bar and a big pool and everyone drinks.’ I’m not a big fan of those. I
like the ones that are a little bit more, like, centered around a particular activity because I feel
like you find people who have common interests.”
I ask Alex how he tries to document his travel. He states:
It’s all digital for me. So, I’m a technologist, right? Like everything I do is, I’m
taking pictures. I love that I can take a picture with my iPhone and it’s geotagged
my location, so then it shows up on a photo map. Either in Apple Photos or in
Instagram, when I upload it to Instagram. I post Facebook status, like. I wrote a
few things in a journal, but really, like thought it was more personal stuff than like
about the trip. I feel like I just want to – I document everything. And yeah, I’m
sure I’ll lose some of this information, but, um, I find that just taking the pictures
and having the pictures is the best thing for me. Um, not really a fan of writing, I
hate writing. I’d rather just like, do it on a computer. In fact, I talk about
technology. I think we’ll soon be able to make – we’ll have applications on the
iPhone soon where you can mix, um, text and pictures very easily, and I look
forward to that stuff in the future, and it’s early. But, um, it’s too much of a hassle
for me to journal everything. Plus it’s amazing how connected we are, right?
He explains he has also taken advantage of this connectedness by taking care of personal items
back home while here in Colombia.
Alex states that he buys bracelets as souvenirs of his trips, but that he places an emphasis
on trying culinary offerings as he feels they provide more lasting impressions than physical
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purchases. “I love trying the local cuisine. And, I know backpackers try to save money and eat
fucking cans of tuna, but I feel like they are missing out on the food and a big part of the culture
when you, when you skimp there. You know, I’d rather skimp on the booze at night in the hostel
that most people spend on, or the drugs than skimping on the local food.” Alex does not care for
fried food, but claims he is eating a lot of it because it is what is offered locally and he enjoys
partaking in the local cuisine.
He mentions buying gifts with meaning or for special occasions before discussing his
thoughts on most of the items for sale. He remarks:
For me it’s about taking pictures. I don’t really want, um, you know little trinkets.
And plus I feel like a lot of the places we’ve been going to, backpackers, are kind
of starting – you know, they’re really Gringo Traily. So, you know, the stuff that
they sell is kind of shit. But, I think it would be cool to buy, like, a real, um,
poncho. Not like these fucking shit ones they sell in Salento, like on Gringo Street
[laughs]. I think it would be really cool to buy, like, a real hammock, you know?
He claims that much of the offerings are “basically made in China and then sold here.”
Alex reiterates that physical purchases are not important to him. “I don’t buy things, I
buy experiences.” He lists scuba diving, surfing, and zip lining as experiences he has purchased
while traveling. He complains about a friend who refused to pay to walk to the top of El Peñón, a
towering rock in Guatapé, Colombia, due to budget concerns. “What are you going to fucking
come back to Guatapé when you have more money and go see the top? It’s like, I’ll – I’ll spend
the money to go see that, but sleep in a shitty hammock or something, or you know, skip a meal
if I have to, because I’d rather pay for the experiences.”
As far as digital technology, Alex carries a DSLR (digital single-lens reflex) camera and
an iPhone. “iPhone is really like an amazing – it’s an amazing travel device. It’s a camera, it’s
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maps, it’s a kindle if you have Lonely Planet Guide. Um, it’s email, it’s really everything. It’s
Skype to keep uh, to video chat. I think this, the iPhone is one of the best travel devices.” Alex
also purchased a local cell phone due to the length of his stay within Colombia “and it’s easier to
keep in touch with locals that way.”
Alex claims that he does solicit travel information on Facebook. He also tells of a friend
that “friendsourced” a trip to Japan through a solicitation on Facebook. “He put, ‘I’m going to
Japan,’ uh, ‘and I want to quote friendsource my travel plans and fill out this Google
Spreadsheet,’ and he got like 25 recommendations.” Alex tried something similar for his trip to
Colombia and received quite a bit of information. He claims:
People came out of the woodwork. Like, “Oh, I have a friend who’s from
Colombia.” One girl’s like, “I’m half Colombian,” I didn’t know that; or
recommending all these different things. The problem is, they don’t really know
where you are, and it’s not really that easy because they just name the shit that’s
in the guidebook anyway. The cool thing is when someone is like, “I’ve got this
friend there, you can meet him.”
He summarizes his effort, “I did try to friendsource some of my, uh travel plans and some of it
worked. Some of the things, you know, they’re just naming the stuff I already know about.”
Alex uses Facebook less while traveling, but claims it is due to having less Internet
access. He also states that he uses it for different purposes. “But now I use Facebook less to like,
read status updates than I do to like send messages. Or, you know, I’ll see what’s going on like
on my news feed quick, whereas um, at home it’s almost like it’s open, because it’s, it’s there.”
He uses other social media sites as well. “I use, really, Twitter a bunch. I use Instagram a
ton to send pictures. And, because I can post to both Facebook and Foursquare [we are
interrupted by the sound of dogs fighting in the distance] What the hell? [continues] Facebook
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and I actually guess I’ve been using is Foursquare.” He mentions using the service to “geotag”
himself at various destinations along his trip. This allows him an aid in remembering exactly
where his trip takes him.
Everyone was supportive of Alex’s decision to travel, and some claimed he “deserved it.”
He thinks the media portrayal of Colombia is inaccurate and that its citizens are “friendly.” He
tells several stories of locals going out of their way to help him out. He claims that most people
think of drugs or murder when thinking about Colombia, but that he could show me the same
things back home.
Alex and I stay at the beach “resort” consisting entirely of dorm rooms with bunks, strawthatched huts, and hammocks for a couple of days. The cost of a bunk is on par with those found
in the majority of hostels. The second day Alex is offered a bunk that has become available, but
he decides to stay in the separate accommodations, like he did the evening before.
He tells me he wants to check up on some things he is trying to accomplish back home by
reading his email. We have Wi-Fi, but it is extremely slow and is meant only for “emergency
purposes.” He wants to head towards the closest town in order to find an Internet café and
possibly pick up some food. I tell Alex I’d be interested in coming along and he is agreeable to
the idea. We tell others of our plans and some put in food requests. A member of the resort calls
some local mototaxis (motorcycles that allow one passenger on the back for a fare) and we head
off once they arrive.
The drivers are carefree and commonly accomplish tasks other than driving while on the
road. They all know each other and honk in passing. After just a few minutes on the road they
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stop and inform us we have reached our destination. We enter the Internet café and realize we are
its only customers. The owner directs us to computers and we try to connect to the Internet. It is
not long before we realize that the Internet is not working, so we ask for help. The woman tells
us to try again and this time we have a connection, but it is every bit as slow as the one back at
the resort.
Alex becomes frustrated and claims his computer is not connecting at all. He suggests
that we see if there might be another option in “town,” which looks to be only a handful of
buildings along the highway.
We see a sign offering Internet and approach a building that is clearly someone’s
residence. A young teenage girl begins speaking with us in Spanish. Alex asks if they have
Internet and she claims they do. We enter the house and share a room with her and a young boy
who appears to be about six or seven at most. He stares at us for a while before deciding to
respond to Alex’s small talk. After a lull in the conversation, he looks at us and says, “Repollo rechicken.” I recognize his quote from an advertisement I saw on Colombian television for
OpenEnglish, an online site dedicated to teaching English. Alex is unfamiliar with the ad and
asks what the boy is talking about. Just then, the girl tells us the Internet is ready.
Alex tries accessing his email and is still having issues. I jump on for a second while he
strikes up a casual conversation with the girl. The Internet is slow, but I quickly see that my
friend back home has received a gift I ordered online as a birthday present. I tell Alex it worked
for me and that he should try again. He does but quickly states that it is just as slow as any of the
other connections, so we might as well just log on back at the resort.
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We shop for some fruit and junk food, and then hail a mototaxi driver who is hanging
around nearby. He calls a friend who is also a driver and we all ride off back to whence we came.
Later that night we sit around a campfire made by some of the other guests. Everyone is relaxing
in hammocks or sitting on the beach. Some people are sipping on beer or passing around
aguardiente. No one appears to be intoxicated, or at least they are keeping it well hidden. Slowly
the crowd disperses as the fire dies out, except for Alex who has passed out in a hammock. I take
the short walk inland to see what is happening with some of the other guests.
A group of people are sitting around listening to the music on someone’s MP3 player or
smartphone (I can’t make out which) while building a house made of playing cards. I ask if I can
join their group and they agree. They continue on with their conversation and after a few minutes
without acknowledging me, I surmise that they are a well-knit group content with their own
company. I head off to the bar and strike up a conversation in Spanish with the bartender, who is
a woman from Argentina that appears to be in her mid-20s.
The bartender is playing music that is digitally stored on her netbook, and I ask if she is
fond of some of the bands that I know of from Argentina. She has some of the albums from a
couple of the bands and asks how I know about them. I explain that a friend from Medellin had
introduced me to the groups. She plays a few songs and explains some of the lyrics.
I look to the side of me and see two female guests I met earlier that day. They have their
heads down and their faces are illuminated by the glow of their smartphones, which they are
using to browse the Internet. They are so preoccupied that they do not even notice that someone
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else has sat at the bar. They had been quite social earlier in the day, and clearly know each other.
However, neither speaks a word.
After a couple days, Alex and I both mention we are planning on leaving. Alex says I
should join him and some others at a hostel in Santa Marta, but I explain that I planned on going
back to Taganga, which is only about twenty minutes away from Santa Marta. He says he’s been
there and that I should check out Santa Marta instead because the hostel there is nicer. I recall
that the Wi-Fi at the hostel in Taganga was not very good, and wonder if this is what he means. I
say I’ll think about it, and ultimately I do decide to see what Santa Marta has to offer. I catch a
ride with some employees that are headed to Santa Marta and Alex ends up catching a bus due to
no more seats being available in the personal vehicle.
I arrive at the hostel in Santa Marta and make it a priority to grab a shower and then find
dinner. I eat at a Mexican restaurant next to the hostel, and later find out that both are owned by a
group of young expats from the United States. Upon returning, I see that Alex has arrived and
has been assigned to the same dorm room as me. The room was a disaster when I checked in, and
someone there mentioned that the guests responsible were off somewhere in Taganga. The
condition of the room has not improved when Alex arrives, and he is disgusted by the sight of
water bottles, cups, clothes, and personal effects strewn about the room. He remarks that it is
impossible to walk to his bunk, and heads off downstairs to discuss it with an employee. Not
long after, some girls enter the room and start tidying up. They do not make any conversation
with me, but it is obvious they are our dorm companions.
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The next day Alex tells me he is leaving and tells me he wants to connect via social
networking. We exchange information and wish each other luck as we say goodbye. We never
end up reaching out for travel purposes, but do exchange some brief messages brought about by
wishing him a happy birthday.
Chapter Summary
This chapter’s preceding sections offer an overview of the ethnographic findings of my
thesis by profiling seven individuals and detailing their travel experiences in Latin America. The
following chapter will draw from these case studies and reference other data collected in an
effort to analyze the backpacker experience in a broader context.
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CHAPTER FOUR: DISCUSSION
The previous chapters highlight the dearth of sociocultural research concerning
backpackers within many parts of the world, especially Latin America. This chapter begins with
a discussion of traveler typologies, continues on to topics specifically related to backpacking in
various Latin American countries, and finally moves on to a more general consideration of
digital technology’s continuing impact on this subculture.
Classifications of Traveler Typologies
Among other things, the case studies offered in the preceding chapter provide
opportunities to explore the utility of classifying individual travelers within the existing
typologies outlined in the literature review. By delineating the demographics and traveling
preferences of these individuals, it becomes easier to associate them with specific categories such
as backpackers or flashpackers. What follows is a brief categorization of the individuals profiled
in the case studies.
Concerning demographics and spending habits, Craig, Sara, Juan, Alex, and I pretty
much fall into the flashpacker category as it is currently defined. However, it is somewhat
difficult to attribute this designation to all of us in a mobile computing usage sense, as Sara uses
nothing more than a digital camera and Juan carries nothing other than the most basic of mobile
phones. Their preference for nicer accommodations does adhere to the flashpacker classification,
but Alex’s experience highlights an occasionally indifferent attitude to sleeping arrangements in
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an effort to fully embrace the “backpacker adventure.” It is important to note that even the
occasional “nicer accommodations” sought out are still found at hostels or other lodgings within
backpacker enclaves.
Frank, Jack, and Oliver probably best represent the characteristics of a backpacker in a
more “traditional” sense, especially when considering factors such as demographics, income, and
trip length. That said, both Frank and Jack carry more mobile computing than some of the
“flashpackers” that I meet, thus complicating this particular criterion as a differentiating
characteristic between the two terms. Therefore, digital technology should no longer be
considered when attempting to identify “flashpackers.”
The inherent problems associated with strict interpretations of traveler types suggested by
the literature appear evident as many travelers exhibit some but not all of the qualifications of a
particular typology. It could be argued that it is best to move beyond these labels entirely.
However, a reevaluation of the differences utilizing an anthropological framework is a
worthwhile endeavor, especially if such an effort considers independent travelers’ preferences,
practices, and personal information.
Backpacking as a Subculture
Independent travelers do not book packaged vacations, meaning they fall into Cohen’s
(1972) noninstitutionalized type of tourism groups. However, in order to be classified as
backpackers, independent travelers must display certain characteristics. Philip Pearce (1990) laid
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out the criteria for classifying an independent traveler as a backpacker, and Jeff Jarvis and
Victoria Peel (2010) utilize his work to demonstrate that flashpackers are indeed backpackers.
They note the following characteristics of flashpackers, which they assert are similar to
backpackers:







a traveler who found the time to travel by either being on a career break or
an extended holiday from paid employment;
typically aged in their mid twenties and upward;
a preference for small scale, value for money (not necessarily budget)
accommodations;
an emphasis on meeting other travelers and locals (where possible);
an independently organized and flexible travel schedule;
a preference for longer rather than brief holidays (where possible);
an emphasis on informal and participatory holiday activities.
[Jarvis and Peel 2010:36]
Revisiting the case studies demonstrates that all individuals profiled display these
characteristics, despite being a rather diverse group of people. Using the concept of de BurghWoodman and Brace-Govan’s (2007) of subculture, or a group created through shared
experiences that create similar emotions for an otherwise diverse group of people, as I defined in
the literature review, allows for the distinction of backpacking as a subculture. The similar
emotions being opportunities to “see the world” and experience “new perspectives,” all of which
were the most commonly discussed motivations for traveling. This combined with the “shared
experiences” detailed above further illustrate backpacking as a subculture of independent
travelers.
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A Reimagining of Typologies Using an Anthropological Framework
If all flashpackers are backpackers but not all backpackers are flashpackers, what
constitutes the rest of the backpacker subculture? The remaining individuals are “gappers,” and
the term “is understood primarily to mean younger, school or university break travellers” (Jarvis
and Peel 2010:210, emphasis added). Unfortunately, the available literature to date does not
attempt to differentiate between gappers and backpackers, but instead distinguishes between
flashpackers and backpackers.
A reimagining of the use of these terms is necessary for an anthropological analysis of
backpacking. From this point forward, backpackers will be used to refer to a group comprised of
both flashpackers and gappers. While a definition for gappers is offered above, it will be
expanded to include any and all backpackers currently filling a large gap between life stages with
travel of more than three months. Therefore, those transitioning between various levels of
education, individuals preparing to enter the work force for the first time, recent divorcees, or
individuals contemplating a career change will not be excluded simply due to age. A definition
for flashpacker is also offered in the literature review, but the preceding section demonstrates
that it is rather limited in its current understanding.
Despite demonstrating that carrying digital technology need not be a factor in
differentiating gappers and flashpackers, a case can be made that there is indeed a subset of older
backpackers deserving of the flashpacker designation. While flashpackers claim many of the
same travel motivations as gappers and share similar services within backpacker enclaves, there
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is one fundamental difference. Flashpackers spend less time away from home. Thus, the term
flashpacker is still applicable, provided it is altered to denote a backpacker-like trip completed in
a “flash,” rather than an older backpacker carrying a flashdrive.
Flashpackers are not often afforded the opportunity to travel for several months at a time.
Their shorter trips are primarily due to the fact that many are at mid-career and must eventually
return to jobs. This contrasts with gappers, who are often in between educational milestones or
have completed their school but not yet entered the job market. My travels do reveal some older
gappers on journeys of six months or more. However, these particular individuals have usually
recently been terminated or quit a job and decided not to immediately return to the workforce.
Having explained the rationale behind the shorter trips of flashpackers, some attention
must be paid to the effects. The most noticeable effect is an ability to spend more money each
day. This occurs not only because the trip will be shorter, stretching travel budgets, but also since
flashpackers will return to salaried employment sooner than gappers. Thus, flashpackers are not
nearly as preoccupied with budgets as gappers. This can result in an ability to purchase more
“experiences” without making as many sacrifices, or allow for more private sleeping quarters at
hostels. Such perks do not mean flashpackers actively desire to spend more money, and Alex’s
discussion concerning value corroborates this assertion, but many display an indifferent attitude
to the mere act of spending money. The same cannot be said about gappers, as evidenced by
Frank’s claim that something must be “pretty freaking cool” for him to spend money on it.
The limited ability to spend also results in a flashpacker’s desire to maximize their
experiences. On numerous occasions I witness road weary gappers content sitting in the public
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spaces of hostels. I’m not referring to killing time before or after an activity or meal, or winding
down after a long day. Rather I am instead referring to an entire day spent reading a book,
surfing the Internet, or making idle chat with others. This is not the case for flashpackers, who
usually pack their itineraries. For gappers, there will probably almost always be another city or
rural setting, offering another museum or excursion, so there is little compelling reason to see all
that are offered at each stop. In effect, just as gappers simply have more time and opportunities
than money, flashpackers have more funds than time and opportunity. This is not to say that
gappers will skip out on all the opportunities available to them, but they are often more selective
than flashpackers.
Discretionary income is a key determinant of touristic patterns, as Graburn notes:
Income is a factor to be juggled when deciding amongst competing styles whether
to emphasize expensive style, distance travel, or time away from home. It ceases
to be a limiting factor only for those “nomads from affluence” (Cohen 1973) who
maximize the last two factors at the expenses of the first, in their “prolonged
moratorium from adulthood” in their efforts to lead a life which “reverses” many
of the aspects of their “stodgy” middle-class parents.
[Graburn 1983:19-20]
An interesting aspect of this quote is that Graburn cites Cohen’s (1973) “nomads from
affluence,” a precursor to the modern backpacker, as not being limited by income due to seeking
out less expensive accommodations than other tourists. However, while gappers often do opt out
of “expensive style” entirely, they are still constrained by budgets. Conversely, flashpackers
have only a limited amount of time to spend “away from home,” and, therefore, are more freely
able to splurge, albeit in a relative manner (e.g. Alex’s more expensive room or Craig, Sara, and
my purchase of a volcano-boarding excursion with additional sight-seeing). Such findings
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illustrate that discretionary income can indirectly determine differences between flashpackers
and gappers, as flashpackers cannot readily seek out long journeys.
Graburn also provides a theoretical framework for further investigation of differences
between gappers and backpackers. Illustrating that “the structure of tourism is basically identical
with the structure of all ritual behavior” (Graburn 1983:12), he posits that tourism can be viewed
in one of two ways. Graburn argues that tourism can reflect a “rite of intensification” or a “rite of
passage,” and builds upon the distinction between the two offered by Chapple and Coon
(1942:398-426). He likens rites of intensification to “the annual trip or vacation, the weekend,
and the Christmas, Easter and summer breaks (in the Western world) which are repetitive,
predicatable, timed breaks that allow people ‘recreation’ and mark the progress of cyclical time”
(Graburn 1983:12). This contrasts with the rites of passage forms of tourism, which are “usually
self-imposed (and thereby more exceptional and often personally meaningful)” and “commonly
found associated with major life changes” (Graburn 1983:13).
The literature review points out that backpacking can be viewed as a rite of passage, but
it should be made clear that gappers are the ones seeking out such experiences, often into
adulthood. Lea, a 22 year old female and recent college graduate from Canada on a seven month
trip across South America, directly admits that she is attempting to experience a rite of passage
on her trip. When I ask her about her traveling motivations, she says, “I think it’s just to kind of
find out what my purpose in life is [laughs]” (Interview with Lea, Canada). Jack, who is older
and has already left a “terrible” job he obtained with his college degree, is less forthcoming with
this admission initially, but does acknowledge that it may happen. He says:
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Everyone has their take, about that I’m looking for something, like I’m not just
traveling, like trying to gain experience or just have fun. But everyone thinks I’m
off trying to do soul searching, which, which, you know, isn’t that I won’t at some
point, but it’s really just to break out of the ordinary and do something different. I
don’t know if that means they think I need to do soul searching, I don’t know
what that really says about them, but [trails off] (Interview with Jack, USA)
Whether or not gappers actually “find themselves” during their travels is something of a
moot point, as the mere desire to do so indicates that a rite of passage is being sought out. Their
sought out experiences mirror those described by Graburn (1983).
If gappers are experiencing their travels as a rite of passage, what does this sayt about
flashpackers? Flashpackers have the ability to return for more travels in this manner, which
suggest a rite of intensification, or cyclical travel. Consulting Alex’s case study suggests that
while he does view his travels as a “backpacker adventure,” he sets out for “escape” rather than
“finding himself.”
While gappers and flashpackers may set out on their trips with different ideas about the
personal transformations that may occur, each seeks out similar activities abroad. They both also
use many of the same services provided within backpacker enclaves. From these similarities, it is
possible to discuss the general backpacker experience without differentiating between gappers
and flashpackers as will occur in the following sections.
Backpacker Enclaves along the “Gringo Trail”
The tourism counterculture of early drifters sought out destinations far removed from
those utilized by their Western contemporaries. However, as drifters effectively evolved into
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backpackers, the homogenization and ultimately commodification of the services provided to
them became increasingly prevalent.
Latin America’s backpacking scene largely adheres to traveling along the “Gringo Trail.”
This path is the Western Hemisphere’s version of the 1960s and 1970s’ “Hippie Trail” or today’s
“Banana Pancake Trail” in Southeast Asia.
In both theory and practice, the “Gringo Trail” originates in or around Cancun, Mexico
enabling a visit to a historical Maya site, Chichen Itza, and ends somewhere in South America,
depending on the particular route taken. The trail’s South American leg is less rigidly defined
than sections in Central America, partly because its wide geographical span is manifested in a
more dendritic way. Also, more recent political conflicts in South America resulted in travelers
avoiding several countries entirely.
It was also not long ago that overland travel from Cartagena, where many people arrive
when sailing from Panama, to destinations farther south was considered too dangerous. The
declining influences of both Sendero Luminoso (Shining Path) in Peru and the FARC (Fuerzas
Armadas Revolucionarias de Colombia, or Armed Revolutionary Forces of Colombia) in
Colombia have effectively quelled the fears of many Westerners.
One interviewee, a 27 year old female from the United States named Louise, summarizes
her thoughts on the influx of tourists in Colombia and provides the results of an informal survey
she conducts among hospitality stakeholders. She states, “People are coming, like people just
needed to know that it’s OK…In talking to a lot of the hotel owners and managers and sort of
asking how this place has changed everyone says, ‘Oh my God. Like, there are people here now.
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There are tourists, and like, it’s only going to get more and more and more’” (Interview with
Louise, USA). The ability to safely travel southbound on roads paralleling South America’s
Pacific coastline, coupled with the emergence of Brazil as a tourism superpower (e.g. hosting the
upcoming 2014 World Cup and 2016 Olympic Games) arguably necessitates a reimagining of
the traditional Gringo Trail. However, one discernible way of plotting the trail is to identify the
backpacker enclaves that connect the various cities and sites frequented by Western travelers.
These enclaves are not really difficult to find considering that they are typically
characterized by the presence of at least one hostel. When this is coupled with a multitude of
small restaurants or bars offering Western fare, the likelihood that this is a backpacker enclave
increases. A handout from a hostel in Salento, Colombia illustrates [Figures 1 and 2] this idea by
pointing out how enclaves need not be only consolidated to one local neighborhood, but can
instead encompass almost an entire town.
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Figure 1: Map of Salento produced and provided by a local hostel
Source: The Plantation House, Salento, Colombia
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Figure 2: Back of map (Figure 1) with information concerning restaurants listed
Source: The Plantation House, Salento, Colombia
My case study of Craig and Sara highlights that backpacker enclaves do indeed exist in
Nicaragua. A detailed look at both Ometepe and León provide ample opportunities to discuss
enclaves in both rural and urban settings.
León offers something for all members of the backpacker community. At the time of my
visit, León was experiencing a boom in the number of hostels offering lodging to backpackers.
Some of these hostels incorporate large bars in their floor plans so as to entice “leisure
backpackers,” or those engaging in behavior that “seemed to resemble an extended graduation
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party where recent college graduates could meet other like themselves in exotic locales…the
locale only functioning as a backdrop for the experience” (Schaffer 2004:151). As also noted,
some of these very hostels provide mass organized trips for volcano boarding, which may or may
not include stops to a lagoon offering possible interaction with locals, in addition to a walking
tour of León Viejo, a failed early Spanish settlement. The additional offerings are more likely to
cater to the “cultural backpacker,” which completes Schaffer’s backpacker type binary. They are
described as “middle-class kids trying not to miss an opportunity to see things that they might
never see again” (Schaffer 2004:151).
León’s bus stop is frequented by charter buses, enabling travelers to forgo the “chicken
buses” (older school buses). These buses are often devoid of their namesake animal, but are
instead filled with a multitude of locals. These buses provide less costly transportation than the
charter lines, but it is unusual to see backpackers making use of them due to the difficulty of
navigating language and logistical barriers.
Instead of dealing with the unknowns of the chicken bus, it is entirely possible for
backpackers to enter León via an air-conditioned liner, with in-bus movies, reclining-seats, and a
limited number of stops once en route. Once they have arrived, the charter bus patrons can check
into the hostel they previously booked online along with their volcano-boarding trip. They can
enjoy drinks, sometimes provided for free with the purchase of their organized excursion. While
settling into the on-site bar, weary backpackers can peruse the Internet with provided computers
or on their own mobile computing devices connecting to the hostel’s free Wi-Fi. Once hungry,
they can venture to a nearby restaurant that serves many different types of Western cuisine. Or
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they can walk across the street to another hostel managed by Westerners that features a large bar
and local cover band that plays classic rock. Travelers can accomplish all of this without really
interacting with townsfolk or understanding of the local language.
Ometepe is a backpacker enclave in a much harder to reach rural setting. Craig, Sara, and
I take an old yellow school bus, a taxi, and a ferry to reach the island from León. Unlike the
chartered bus the three of us take from Tegucigalpa, Honduras to León, Nicaragua, there are no
other Westerners sharing seats with us during the journey’s multiple legs. Once on Ometepe, we
do encounter fellow travelers, but only in the enclave that exists in a fairly small region just past
the dock used by the ferry. Craig and I do not see any Westerners at the local fair we
inadvertently discover, nor do we encounter any the following night when Sara joins us in
visiting our newly formed local friends at a bar beyond the confines of the enclave.
Like León, the island offers opportunities for adventurous outings, but unlike Leon,our
time spent in Ometepe results in much more interaction with locals. However, it is impossible to
say whether or not this occurs if the bar listed in Sara’s guidebook is open, therefore resulting in
Craig and I not wandering off in search of a drink.
Honduras is also home to backpacker enclaves with the vast majority being confined to a
very condensed region along the Caribbean coast. Tegucigalpa and San Pedro Sula are largely
considered too dangerous for unnecessary visits, and as a result, backpacker enclaves do not exist
in these urban areas. As described in an earlier case study, my initial stop in Tegucigalpa is not
frightening as I seem to be fortunate enough to have a taxi driver lead me to a safe part of town.
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However, my return to the city is much more harrowing, perhaps since I require lodging near a
different bus terminal.
In this visit, I am personally escorted to a hotel from a microbus stop in Tegucigalpa by a
concerned local from my bus and her father, who greets her upon our nighttime arrival into town
and becomes my guardian as well as hers. Upon leaving the bus terminal, we all split a taxi with
another bus passenger. When she exits our taxi, I try to take her vacant seat up front to make
more room in the back, but am quickly informed to stay seated and keep the door closed because
it is too dangerous to be on the street even for a brief moment. These same helpful people ensure
that I had a to-go meal from a small store before dropping me off at a hotel room and carefully
instructing me not to open my door for anyone. I heed their warnings, as the scene we pass on
the way to the hotel is much different than the one I recall from across town about a week prior.
The city of La Cieba, Honduras does provide a hostel and other accommodations fitting
of a backpacker’s budget. However, these facilities are often little more than a place to sleep
before jumping off to somewhere in the Bay Islands, mainly the English speaking islands of
Utila and Roatan. Once nestled into these remote enclaves, a backpacker can participate in diving
lessons or take part in the rather hedonistic party scene with the other large number of
Westerners.
Some travelers opt to head inland from La Cieba, and encounter a rather docile enclave
near Pico Bonito that thrives on adventure tourism like river rafting. There, I witness an
awkward apology by a guest for the actions of his intoxicated friends who refuse to call it a night
despite the bar closing. The man to whom he is apologizing later informs me that not only were
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the guests aggressively adamant that his girlfriend, the bartender, not close up shop, but that they
actually made their way to the sleeping space shared by the two in order to berate them for
refusing to sell more alcohol. He seems rather taken aback by the traveler’s actions, and does
insinuate that these types of occurrences are rare.
When considering Honduras and Nicaragua, it is difficult to identify which type of
backpacker enclave, urban or rural, is more likely to host a scene sought out by leisure
backpackers. While León’s urban enclave is very accommodating to a party scene, the same
cannot be said about La Ceiba or other locations in Honduras. The rural enclaves in Ometepe and
Pico Bonito are extremely tame when compared to the offerings in the Bay Islands.
Despite such differences, a few general conclusions can be drawn. If a backpacker
enclave emerges in a rather remote location with few draws for cultural or adventure tourism, it
is likely that this isolation indicates a somewhat hedonistic backpacker party scene. I would also
suggest that the majority of urban backpacker enclaves are more likely to host a party scene, as
they are easier to access and sometimes are quite necessary stops along the trail. They play host
to larger numbers of travelers, especially those unwilling to venture far off the beaten path.
These urban centers are also less likely to offer outings that are physically exerting or require
rising at very early hours; thus enabling a party atmosphere.
While I invariably encounter individuals displaying a propensity to fit the definition of
either “leisure” or “cultural” backpacker, I would argue that nearly everyone I meet on my
travels fall along a spectrum with these two imagined backpacker types serving as the extremes.
Some individuals easily transition between types within a given 24 hour period, as highlighted
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by Craig’s assertion that he is only on the road for a short while and therefore he has every
intention of seeing as much as he can during the day and partying as much as possible at night.
According to him, sleep is something he does back home.
Another backpacker, Oliver, describes his transition from seeking out the party scene to
searching for a more relaxed atmosphere. When asked what he looks for in a hostel, he states,
“Depends what I’m feeling at the time. In Peru I was looking for, I don’t know why, but I was
looking for a party hostel. Um, whereas here, now I’ve sort of changed my opinion where I’d
rather have a bit of a, a chillout hostel” (Interview with Oliver, Australia).
Consuming Local Culture
The distinct advantage that the Gringo Trail possesses over other similar international
traveler paths is that only one language is spoken, indigenous groups and Brazil notwithstanding.
Spanish fluency is certainly not a prerequisite for travel along the trail, but it facilitates increased
interaction with locals who do not speak English, which serves as the default common language
of Western travelers.
While trip duration certainly plays into the degree of fluency attained by a traveler, it is
important to recognize that some travelers do not feel the need to acquire an extensive
vocabulary or working knowledge of Spanish. Most travelers recognize that backpacker enclaves
are home to hostels where “English language speakers are always on staff” (Questionnaire
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response from Craig, USA). Perusing online reviews of hostels easily results in finding multiple
comments lamenting that employees are not fluent in English.
Spanish does utilize the same characters for written language as English, save for a few
exceptions, and the two share words with similar Latin roots. Therefore, it is much easier for the
“gringos” (this can specifically mean people from the United States, but is more broadly used to
refer to any Westerners) to quickly adopt at least some level of proficiency in the local tongue.
Many “through backpackers,” or those traversing the vast majority or all of the “Gringo Trail,” I
meet express an interest in learning Spanish as they are confident that it will serve them well
during their travels.
However, many travelers are able to traverse the Gringo Trail without speaking a word of
Spanish. This is possible for several reasons. My experiences in Colombia provide several
examples of what factors contribute to this practice. First, backpackers stick primarily to
enclaves built by Western expatriates. The Colombian government has programs designed
specifically to encourage these foreign investments that assist their burgeoning tourism industry.
Large tax breaks for the construction of new tourist lodgings or the remodeling of existing
facilities are extended to foreign investors (“Top Ten Reasons to Invest in Tourism Infrastructure
in Colombia,” n.d.) Many large international hotel chains have already taken advantage of these
tax breaks by constructing new hotels or making plans to do so (ibid).
These policies have also resulted in a rise in small-scale investment with many
Westerners migrating to establish a new life and pursue financial opportunities within the local
tourist sector. I personally meet over a half dozen hostel owners and only two of these owners
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are Colombian. The others are all from a range of countries including England, Greece, the
United States, and Australia. However, one such Colombian woman is not even the primary
owner, but rather is working for an Israeli friend in exchange for a stake in the business. He
opened the hostel several years ago but needed to return home. She accepted an offer to quit her
job and run the hostel full time in his absence.
While some foreign investors seek out hostel ownership, other Western entrepreneurs
lacking sufficient start-up capital opt to join the tourism industry by opening restaurants. These
restaurateurs do not need to produce a fusion dish that is a hybrid of local and foreign cuisine.
Instead, they can simply give the backpackers what they want: cheap comfort food from their
countries of origin. The cuisine is not necessarily representative of the home country of the
restaurateurs either. Rather, it is often a smattering of staples from numerous Western nations.
For instance, at one hostel I discovered a flyer for a restaurant nested within an urban
backpacker enclave that describes itself as “backpacker friendly.” Vegemite, an Australian
specialty, is proudly featured on the flyer of the restaurant, which turns out to be owned by a
United States citizen.
What is interesting is that the enclaves restrict a possible rite of passage from mere
Westerner to culturally competent world-traveler by enabling an individual to enter a perpetual
liminal state. One in which they are no longer physically located in their society of origin, but
still commonly experiencing languages and cuisines from home. However, this is not really a
problem for some backpackers as they express more of a desire to meet other backpackers rather
than locals:
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I mean, for me, I think one of the coolest things about the backpacker experience
are all the relationships that you form when you’re traveling. There’s, like this
idea, kind of relief that because you are not in your own country and you’re pretty
sure the people you are hanging out with don’t know your friends from home. So
people are really themselves when they’re traveling, I think. Um, it’s not like
they’re crazier or something, they’re just not worried someone is going to see
them doing something. So there’s that very natural - and I find that relationships
form much more quickly. And, like it’s not a big deal if you don’t want to hang
out with that person, then you just don’t. You just go somewhere else. It’s the idea
that, ‘Oh, I’m going to be here for two days. Let’s be really good friends for two
days and then maybe I’ll never see you again.’ It’s like really cool, it’s like really
freeing. But I think it can actually build stronger relationships then, because
they’re not imposed by any expectations. (Interview with Louise, USA)
If backpackers are willing to leave the enclave, or want to pursue alternate forms of
transportation, it becomes rather imperative to possess some degree of Spanish fluency. This
appears to be somewhat in contrast to the experience along the Banana Pancake Trail, according
to at least one interviewee:
I met these two girls the other day from Canada. And they were a bit nervous
about traveling South America because they did not know English [corrects
herself later by stating they did not know Spanish]. And they’ve been all over
Asia and they said it was so easy. There was always a bus to get from the obvious,
like, points. And they were trying to get a bus from Bogotá [Colombia] to Quito
[Ecuador], which is a three-bus journey trip and it costs almost as much as the
flight and you have to get taxis and you have get to the border; it’s a bit dodgy.
And for them, they were just really nervous about how much more energy you’d
have to put into getting from A to B, which I think is a bit of a common theme in
some places in Latin America. You have – it is a little bit harder than maybe
Vietnam, Thailand…So I thought that was quite interesting, that – because I know
a bit of Spanish so I kind of use it, but for someone who doesn’t know it, maybe
there is like more reliance on like booking hostels up front, on like checking –
because they can’t leave it up to the last minute. Whereas, if you know a bit of
Spanish you have more confidence in terms of bus stations or [incomprehensible].
But they were like booking the hostel ten days in advance. (Interview with Ruby,
England)
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Based on my participant-observation, I argue that an individual’s dependence on a
printed travel guide is negatively correlated to their understanding of the Spanish language.
Those with a strong grasp of the language more often tell stories that take place off the beaten
path or involve lengthy interactions with locals. Elayne, who speaks Spanish fluently, discusses
her procurement of recommendations for a “more quote, unquote authentic” experience. She
says, “Uh, talking to locals is sometimes good, especially – some of the best places I’ve found
have been just coming into a town with no idea where to stay at and then just asking a cab
driver” (Interview with Elayne, Canada).
Backpacker enclaves serve the purpose of allowing uninitiated Westerner travelers to
visit foreign locales without a full understanding of that way of life, or what Graburn (1983)
might term “cultural self-confidence.” However, the backpackers who seek out an understanding
of the language and day-to-day operations eventually gain an ability to venture farther off the
path. This can occur over the duration of a single trip, but is more likely to occur with sustained
cyclical backpacker-style trips, or multiple “rites of intensification.” Therefore, with effort a
backpacker can truly move closer to Cohen’s (1972) ideal “drifter,” as they can eventually gain
the cultural self-confidence required to go where few others dare venture.
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Technology’s Influence on Backpacking
First time backpackers are often unsure of what awaits them once they actually reach
their destination. Finding travel forums or blogs helps them gain a better understanding of how to
achieve their travel goals and helps calm their nerves.
I went to Honduras like three months ago and then this trip. I remember when I
went to Honduras I printed out like, lists of like ‘Moonguide’ and ‘Lonely Planet
forum.’ And, uh, I had – you know, I didn’t buy the book but I basically printed
out all this stuff and I kind of had an itinerary. And this trip, I literally did not
even have a hostel to stay in. So this is, you know, after I got over that first, like
initial, scary hump. (Interview with Alex, USA)
Alex alludes to the anxiety that can be caused by the unknown, and mentions how much
more comfortable he was traveling without as much information after his initial trip. While many
travelers feel better about possessing some knowledge, they are careful not to procure too much.
Lea, another first time backpacker, admits that she did just enough research to feel safe, but then
stopped her quest for information. She states, “It was almost like part of a goal, was just to, uh be
really, um, like unplanned and just kind of go with whatever we felt like doing once we got
there. And what other people we met were doing” (Interview with Lea, Canada).
Once in travel mode, almost everyone begins collecting word of mouth
recommendations. Alex claims, “I knew that first hostel and ever since then it’s like this
storytelling in the hostel. It’s like, you ask like five people, ‘Where are you going? Where did
you come? Oh, what did you like?’ right?” (Interview with Alex, USA).
These personal recommendations are considered much more valuable than those found
on the Internet or in travel guides. For instance, Oliver comments, “I generally just go with
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recommendations from people who have been to the place I am traveling to…I’d rather hear
something from someone who has been there than, you know, read about it online” (Interview
with Oliver, Australia).
Backpackers place value on these recommendations due to being able to evaluate whether
or not someone has similar tastes. Lea states, “I think if I met someone and I seem to get along
with them and they have the same tastes as me, I would go with them [over an online review]. I
would agree with their, whatever their consensus is and I would probably trust that the most”
(Interview with Lea, Canada).
Hostel owners claim an online presence is necessary, but that creating a buzz among
travelers is more important. One explains, “For my point of view if you make something really
professional, really good, organized and nice environment, it works with the word of mouth.
After a couple of months it will be more busy, you know?” (Interview with hostel owner Yannis,
Greece)
Upon meeting an individual who provides valuable information, backpackers can utilize
social media or email to stay in contact. An overwhelming majority opt to connect via Facebook,
as it proves to be the Western standard for communicating online among the age group that
comprises backpackers. As an example:
I mean, I use Facebook probably more than I would an email address. Um, and
that can be handy for, you know when you add people that take a similar route,
even though you might not meet up with them you can sort of see where they’ve
been, if they’re a few days or a few weeks ahead of you can get ideas and ask
questions. (Interview with Oliver, Australia)
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Whether or not a backpackers’ usage of Facebook increases or decreases is dependent on
how much they used it prior to their travels. Several people claim they use it more while
traveling because of the ability to connect with all the new friends they make, but insinuate that
they rarely use it at home. Others cite using it less due to finally being excited about their daily
activities:
Oh definitely less [referring to using Facebook more or less while traveling].
Yeah, back home, especially since I was at a job I hated, I was pretty much on
Facebook all day at work just trying to pass the time. And now it’s just like, like
once or twice a week. It’s not too much. It’s easier to stay off it when you’re
doing interesting things. (Interview with Jack, USA)
This reversal of usage patterns can be likened to Graburn’s (1983) concept of “ritual
inversions.” The desire to use Facebook and other social networking sites at a different
frequency during travels as compared to at home is evidence of backpackers seeking something
different than the routine they are accustomed to when not on the road.
Using Facebook less than at home does not mean passing up on opportunities to allow the
social networking site to aid a journey. This is evidenced by Alex’s lengthy discussion
concerning “crowdsourcing” travel plans or Jack’s desire to connect with me just in case he
could use a recommendation down the trail.
Technology can assist backpackers in procuring recommendations, and can be a
necessary evil for those with responsibilities extending beyond travel. However, excessive use
can restrict the interaction between backpackers and hinder some of the very goals of
backpacking, namely meeting other backpackers. Last but not least, it can allow for an
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opportunity to stay loosely connected with those met during travels. When asked if she stays in
touch with the people she meets during her travels, Louise says:
Yeah, on Facebook. Um, which is also nice, because it’s not like I write them
long emails. I’m like “this is how I feel today and this is what I’m doing
tomorrow.” And this is what my life is like, it’s more of a, “I’ll contact you if
we’re going to be in the same place, or if I have a question about something;”
cause it’s like really chill and I don’t have to, like, work to uphold the relationship
at all, because there’s no expectations of doing that. (Interview with Louise, USA)
What is particularly interesting is that backpackers have unfettered control in creating
their social networking identities, which could allow for a demonstration of their travel prowess
and increase cultural capital among other backpackers. However, many do not connect until just
before saying goodbye to a recently befriended traveler, even if the interactions take place over
multiple days. This can be seen as a reflection of wanting to maintain some anonymity until after
their interactions have run their course.
While I do utilize some of my connections for personal reasons, the vast majority of those
made do not result in any serious interaction. Others express similar experiences. Thus, the
connection can be seen as a way to demonstrate a traveler’s “worldliness,” even if only in the
Western sense, for the purposes of accruing cultural capital among friends back home.
In many ways, the hypothesis claiming the Internet is the status quo for recommendations
can be largely rejected. It is only the first choice among independent travelers who have not
experienced backpacking before. The overwhelmingly preferred source of information is from
other backpackers currently traversing the “Gringo Trail,” preferably with similar interests.
However, the Internet does serve useful for connecting with other backpackers and does have
many effects on the travel experience, as previously noted.
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Revisiting the section concerning traveler typologies reveals that technology is not a
defining factor of flashpackers. Therefore, the hypothesis stating that these individuals carry
more digital technologies can be pretty well rejected. This is largely due to the fact that out of 16
backpackers included in my thesis, only three did not have some device capable of accessing the
internet. Two of these three individuals meet all the newly offered definition of “flashpacker.”.
Therefore, the entirety of the backpacking community has moved toward carrying digital
technologies with them on their travels, and any future definition of “flashpacker” should not
include technology as a defining characteristic.
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CHAPTER FIVE: CONCLUSION
Backpacking as a mode of travel has come a long way from its drifter roots in the 1960s.
Instead of venturing into the unknown, the majority of Western backpackers exploring Latin
America that I encountered are content to congregate in backpacker enclaves that play host to
other Westerners and offer mostly standardized experiences. Local culture is often only
consumed in small doses unless an individual is willing to purposely seek it out off the beaten
path. Such a willingness to do so is often tied to a high level of cultural self-confidence,
especially an ability to speak passable Spanish.
As the case studies presented in Chapter Three suggest, mobile digital technology plays
an increasingly central role in the backpacking experience for many Westerners. It helps mitigate
fears associated with uncertainty for first time backpackers. Overtime, however, this reliance on
information provided by online forums and travel blogs decreases as backpackers start collecting
word of mouth recommendations. While these recommendations are generally considered more
valuable by backpackers as travelers can personally critique those dispensing advice, their
validity are still often re-checked online.
Many backpackers cite using social networking or digital communications as a way to
document their trips in various ways and to keep in touch with those providing useful
recommendations. It has become standard for hostels to provide computers, but many
backpackers carry mobile devices that can connect to the Internet via Wi-Fi. While these devices
can be used to achieve goals consistent with those stated by backpackers, overusing them
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inadvertently creates a disconnect by allowing backpackers the ability to shut out others around
them, which runs somewhat counter to their frequently stated goal of meeting new people.
The connections made via social networking can be utilized for several purposes that
facilitate travel. However, the manner in which they are made and used suggests that they are
predominately being used as a way to demonstrate that a trip abroad has resulted in procuring
new “friends” from around the globe. Individuals can self-identify as “world travelers,” and
others can identify them as such. In accomplishing this task, travelers can effectively increase
their cultural capital.
Several factors play into whether or not travel goals, primarily meeting other travelers,
are realized. A willingness to disconnect from digital technology increases the amount of
interaction with other travelers. Speaking Spanish can greatly contribute to experiencing people
and places off the “Gringo Trail,” and can enable travelers to become more like the original
backpackers, or “drifters.”
Contributions to Anthropology
Backpackers’ willingness to travel vast distances in an effort to witness different ways of
life suggests a desire to become a global citizen. Unfortunately, the common backpacker
experience is only interacting with other Westerners and hearing tales from their home or about
their travels along the same path. While this does make travelers acknowledge that lifestyles can
vary, it is hardly to a degree that most seem to allude to when expressing motivations for travel,
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particularly “seeing the world” and experiencing new cultures. These findings add to the
argument that backpacking can be more aligned with “institutionalized” forms of mass tourism
(Cohen 1972), even if these enclaves are found in different geographical locations outside of
other mass tourism spaces.
Discussing a wide variety of sought-out experiences from myriad individuals contrasts
Schaffer’s (2004) presentation of either “leisure” or “cultural backpackers.” The assertion that
most travelers display traits of both types provides new avenues for exploration.
The willingness to traverse great distances only to congregate with other like-minded
individuals can also be viewed as a “pilgrimage,” as described by Graburn (1983). Yet, their
leisurely actions are congruent with a “tourist.” This seems to confirm Graburn’s assertion that
the two need not be viewed as inseparable.
Building upon Graburn’s (1983) work yet again, my thesis demonstrates that
backpacking displays two types of tourism. The first is a rite of passage experienced by
backpackers known as gappers. The newly defined flashpackers, which also fall under the
backpacker categorization, display characteristics congruent with rites of intensification.
Broader Contributions
Essentially, my thesis provides an exploration of the enclave concept within Latin
America. Noting a Western dominance of business ownership within the enclave directly
contradicts arguments made that suggest backpacking predominately helps local populations.
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Many people with ties to these locations admit that prices in the area, especially real estate, rise
with an influx of tourists.
My documentation of digital technologies within backpacking subculture also contributes
to other types of discourse. Online identity formation, marketing techniques, and the concept of
technology as a hindrance are just a few items that are touched upon over the course of my
thesis. Taken as a whole, these considerations do much to add to the current understanding about
recent trends among today’s backpackers.
Finally, I have proposed a new and perhaps more accurate definition for flashpacker,
which borrows from the existing definition but disregards the carrying of digital technologies as
a discriminating characteristic. Also offered is the use of “gapper,” a term for what many within
the literature have come to simply refer to as backpacker. Using this term in lieu of backpacker
results in ability to distinguishing between types of backpackers, such as gapper and flashpacker.
Future Research
Future research efforts should continue to address the ever-changing role of technology
within the backpacker community. I believe more focus should be paid to how backpackers
actually go about representing themselves online and for what purposes. I would argue that the
near ubiquity of web browsing mobile devices will cause rifts within the larger backpacker
community that may push some to embrace the original drifter concept as a way to more fully
realize the leisure side of travel.
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While my study suggests but two types of backpackers, future efforts could explore even
more possibilities. Discretionary income, cultural self-confidence, and ritual inversions can
easily serve as the starting point for this exploration. As Graburn (1983:19) posits, these factors
are most responsible for “touristic patterns.” It would also behoove future research efforts to
expand on the cataloging of digital technologies utilized.
Pursuing these efforts can expand the literature on the backpacking community, and shed
light on identity representations. Exploring how digital technologies affect the achievement of
travel goals may result in theory valuable for other settings where these devices are utilized for
leisure purposes. Ultimately, research may provide better understanding of the changing nature
of backpacking and tourism practices at large.
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APPENDIX A: IRB APPROVAL LETTER
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APPENDIX B: SURVEY AND QUESTIONAIRRE
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APPENDIX C: INTERVIEW GUIDE FOR TRAVELERS
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Possible Interview Questions for Travelers
Age?
Birthplace?
Education?
Years traveling?
Motivations:
Do you travel to…
meet new people?
visit friends or family members?
visit landmarks or see “wonders”?
visit theme parks?
experience new cultures, learn new languages?
visit museums or art galleries?
collect something of monetary or sentimental value?
Obstacles:
What are your biggest hindrances to travel?
work?
school?
money?
safety concerns?
logistics?
lack of amenities in certain locations?
Planning:
How do you decide…
where to go?
what to see?
where to stay?
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how to travel once you get there?
how important are the recommendations of friends and family when making these
decisions? do you solicit this information from people?
how important are reviews/forums online when making these decisions?
do you have specific places to look for this information?
do you use printed travel guides? what is your opinion of them?
Deciding:
When considering locations, logistics, and lodging…
What do you consider the “break-even point” for time at a destination compared to the
time required to reach it? (ratio of some kind, e.g. 2 days there for every 1 day of travel)
What do you consider musts for any lodging establishment?
How important are these and other amenities?
How many days would you have to be traveling to pack fewer clothes and plan on doing
laundry? When traveling, how/where is your laundry done?
How much do you consider fees for checked luggage when deciding on luggage?
How much money would you have to save in order to use luggage less comfortable to
travel with, but cheaper to fly with?
Technology:
How does technology assist you when you travel?
What websites do you use to plan travel?
What sites do you use to decide what to see?
Do you have a favorite forum or social networking site for travel purposes?
What electronic devices are you lost without?
Comparing/Contrasting trips of varying lengths:
How does the duration of a trip affect your plans?
Do you see more or less “attractions” on a shorter trip?
Do longer trips require more or less planning?
Do you spend more or less time and money at each destination if you are on a longer
trip?
Memories:
How do you preserve the memories from your travels?
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Do you purchase a similar item of some kind at each location?
Do you purchase gifts for family members or friends?
How do you decide on these items?
Do you order prints of photos from your travels?
Do you use social networking sites to find pictures of you that were taken by new
friends meet while traveling?
Do you stay in contact with these individuals after your travels? Why or why not?
Perceptions related to (current) destinations:
What made you select this destination?
What did your friends and family say when you told them where you were going?
Having spent time here, are you more or less likely to agree with statements made by
your friends or family members?
In your opinion, is this place similar to its portrayal in the media?
Has your opinion of this place changed since arriving?
Will you recommend this place as a travel destination? To whom?
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APPENDIX D: INTERVIEW GUIDE FOR HOSTEL OWNERS
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Possible Interview Questions for Hostel Owners
Age?
Education?
Birthplace?
How long have you been doing this?
How did you get involved in this business?
How many workers do you employ?
Do you get help from family in running your business?
What made you select this location?
Were you considering other locations (within this city or outside of it) as options?
How many guests do you get each month/
What is your busiest time of the year?
Who is your primary clientele?
What is the most common request made by guests?
How do you disseminate information about nearby attractions and locations?
Do you have a working relationship with hostels in other locations or nearby tour operators?
Why or why not?
Do you utilize social media or the Internet to promote your business?
What is your daily turnover?
Do you consider your current business model sustainable?
Do you plan on modifying your business model in the future? Why or why not?
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How concerned are you with currency fluctuations? Inflation?
How concerned are you with local real estate prices?
What amenity that you currently offer would you consider the most important? Why?
Is there an amenity you wish you could offer your guests? What is it?
What attitudes do guests have concerning this neighborhood? city? district? country?
Is crime an issue with your business?
How do you feel your establishment differs from those nearby?
What improvements have you made to your business over the years?
How do you feel this destination differs from others within the country?
What do you think the future holds for your establishment?
Do you stock printed travel guides? What is your opinion of them?
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APPENDIX E: PERMISSION TO REPRODUCE MATERIALS
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126
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